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Dive into the research topics where Pamela Costner is active.

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Featured researches published by Pamela Costner.


Science | 2013

Protection Against Malaria by Intravenous Immunization with a Nonreplicating Sporozoite Vaccine

Robert A. Seder; Lee Jah Chang; Mary E. Enama; Kathryn L. Zephir; Uzma N. Sarwar; Ingelise J. Gordon; LaSonji A. Holman; Eric R. James; Peter F. Billingsley; Anusha Gunasekera; Adam Richman; Sumana Chakravarty; Anita Manoj; Soundarapandian Velmurugan; Minglin Li; Adam Ruben; Tao Li; Abraham G. Eappen; Richard E. Stafford; Sarah Plummer; Cynthia S. Hendel; Laura Novik; Pamela Costner; Floreliz Mendoza; Jamie G. Saunders; Martha Nason; Jason H. Richardson; Jittawadee Murphy; Silas A. Davidson; Thomas L. Richie

Malaria Sporozoite Vaccine Each year, hundreds of millions of people are infected with Plasmodium falciparum, the mosquito-borne parasite that causes malaria. A preventative vaccine is greatly needed. Seder et al. (p. 1359, published online 8 August; see the Perspective by Good) now report the results from a phase I clinical trial where subjects were immunized intravenously with a whole, attenuated sporozoite vaccine. Three of 9 subjects who received four doses and zero of 6 subjects who received five doses of the vaccine went on to develop malaria after controlled malaria infection. Both antibody titers and cellular immune responses correlated positively with the dose of vaccine received, suggesting that both arms of the adaptive immune response may have participated in the observed protection. Intravenous immunization with an attenuated whole malaria sporozoite vaccine protected volunteers in a phase I clinical trial. [Also see Perspective by Good] Consistent, high-level, vaccine-induced protection against human malaria has only been achieved by inoculation of Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) sporozoites (SPZ) by mosquito bites. We report that the PfSPZ Vaccine—composed of attenuated, aseptic, purified, cryopreserved PfSPZ—was safe and wel-tolerated when administered four to six times intravenously (IV) to 40 adults. Zero of six subjects receiving five doses and three of nine subjects receiving four doses of 1.35 × 105 PfSPZ Vaccine and five of six nonvaccinated controls developed malaria after controlled human malaria infection (P = 0.015 in the five-dose group and P = 0.028 for overall, both versus controls). PfSPZ-specific antibody and T cell responses were dose-dependent. These data indicate that there is a dose-dependent immunological threshold for establishing high-level protection against malaria that can be achieved with IV administration of a vaccine that is safe and meets regulatory standards.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Virologic effects of broadly neutralizing antibody VRC01 administration during chronic HIV-1 infection

Rebecca M. Lynch; Eli Boritz; Emily E. Coates; Adam DeZure; Patrick Madden; Pamela Costner; Mary E. Enama; Sarah Plummer; LaSonji A. Holman; Cynthia S. Hendel; Ingelise J. Gordon; Joseph P. Casazza; Michelle Conan-Cibotti; Stephen A. Migueles; Randall Tressler; Robert T. Bailer; Adrian B. McDermott; Sandeep Narpala; Sijy O’Dell; Gideon Wolf; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Brandie A. Freemire; Robert J. Gorelick; Janardan P. Pandey; Sarumathi Mohan; Nicolas Chomont; Rémi Fromentin; Tae-Wook Chun; Anthony S. Fauci; Richard M. Schwartz

A single infusion with broadly neutralizing antibody VRC01 resulted in lowered plasma virus load in HIV-1–infected subjects. Passive aggression for HIV Antibodies that neutralize HIV could add to the therapeutic arsenal to prevent and treat disease. Lynch et al. have now tested one such antibody—VRC01—in HIV-infected individuals. Although little difference was observed in viral reservoir in individuals on antiretroviral therapy, plasma viremia was reduced in untreated subjects with a single infusion of VRC01, preferentially suppressing neutralization-sensitive strains. Passive immunization with neutralizing antibodies could therefore aid in viral suppression in HIV-infected individuals. Passive immunization with HIV-1–neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is being considered for prevention and treatment of HIV-1 infection. As therapeutic agents, mAbs could be used to suppress active virus replication, maintain suppression induced by antiretroviral therapy (ART), and/or decrease the size of the persistent virus reservoir. We assessed the impact of VRC01, a potent human mAb targeting the HIV-1 CD4 binding site, on ART-treated and untreated HIV-1–infected subjects. Among six ART-treated individuals with undetectable plasma viremia, two infusions of VRC01 did not reduce the peripheral blood cell–associated virus reservoir measured 4 weeks after the second infusion. In contrast, six of eight ART-untreated, viremic subjects infused with a single dose of VRC01 experienced a 1.1 to 1.8 log10 reduction in plasma viremia. The two subjects with minimal responses to VRC01 were found to have predominantly VRC01-resistant virus before treatment. Notably, two subjects with plasma virus load <1000 copies/ml demonstrated virus suppression to undetectable levels for over 20 days until VRC01 levels declined. Among the remaining four subjects with baseline virus loads between 3000 and 30,000 copies, viremia was only partially suppressed by mAb infusion, and we observed strong selection pressure for the outgrowth of less neutralization-sensitive viruses. In summary, a single infusion of mAb VRC01 significantly decreased plasma viremia and preferentially suppressed neutralization-sensitive virus strains. These data demonstrate the virological effect of this neutralizing antibody and highlight the need for combination strategies to maintain virus suppression.


Vaccine | 2010

A replication defective recombinant Ad5 vaccine expressing Ebola virus GP is safe and immunogenic in healthy adults

Julie E. Ledgerwood; Pamela Costner; N. Desai; LaSonji A. Holman; Mary E. Enama; Galina Yamshchikov; Sabue Mulangu; Zonghui Hu; Charla A. Andrews; R.A. Sheets; Richard A. Koup; Mario Roederer; Robert T. Bailer; John R. Mascola; Maria Grazia Pau; Nancy J. Sullivan; Jaap Goudsmit; Gary J. Nabel; Barney S. Graham

Ebola virus causes irregular outbreaks of severe hemorrhagic fever in equatorial Africa. Case mortality remains high; there is no effective treatment and outbreaks are sporadic and unpredictable. Studies of Ebola virus vaccine platforms in non-human primates have established that the induction of protective immunity is possible and safety and human immunogenicity has been demonstrated in a previous Phase I clinical trial of a 1st generation Ebola DNA vaccine. We now report the safety and immunogenicity of a recombinant adenovirus serotype 5 (rAd5) vaccine encoding the envelope glycoprotein (GP) from the Zaire and Sudan Ebola virus species, in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded, dose escalation, Phase I human study. Thirty-one healthy adults received vaccine at 2×10(9) (n=12), or 2×10(10) (n=11) viral particles or placebo (n=8) as an intramuscular injection. Antibody responses were assessed by ELISA and neutralizing assays; and T cell responses were assessed by ELISpot and intracellular cytokine staining assays. This recombinant Ebola virus vaccine was safe and subjects developed antigen specific humoral and cellular immune responses.


Nature Medicine | 2016

Protection against malaria at 1 year and immune correlates following PfSPZ vaccination

Andrew S. Ishizuka; Kirsten E. Lyke; Adam DeZure; Andrea A. Berry; Thomas L. Richie; Floreliz Mendoza; Mary E. Enama; Ingelise J. Gordon; Lee-Jah Chang; Uzma N Sarwar; Kathryn L. Zephir; LaSonji A. Holman; Eric R. James; Peter F. Billingsley; Anusha Gunasekera; Sumana Chakravarty; Anita Manoj; Minglin Li; Adam Ruben; Tao Li; Abraham G. Eappen; Richard E. Stafford; Natasha K C; Tooba Murshedkar; Hope DeCederfelt; Sarah Plummer; Cynthia S. Hendel; Laura Novik; Pamela Costner; Jamie G. Saunders

An attenuated Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) sporozoite (SPZ) vaccine, PfSPZ Vaccine, is highly protective against controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) 3 weeks after immunization, but the durability of protection is unknown. We assessed how vaccine dosage, regimen, and route of administration affected durable protection in malaria-naive adults. After four intravenous immunizations with 2.7 × 105 PfSPZ, 6/11 (55%) vaccinated subjects remained without parasitemia following CHMI 21 weeks after immunization. Five non-parasitemic subjects from this dosage group underwent repeat CHMI at 59 weeks, and none developed parasitemia. Although Pf-specific serum antibody levels correlated with protection up to 21–25 weeks after immunization, antibody levels waned substantially by 59 weeks. Pf-specific T cell responses also declined in blood by 59 weeks. To determine whether T cell responses in blood reflected responses in liver, we vaccinated nonhuman primates with PfSPZ Vaccine. Pf-specific interferon-γ-producing CD8 T cells were present at ∼100-fold higher frequencies in liver than in blood. Our findings suggest that PfSPZ Vaccine conferred durable protection to malaria through long-lived tissue-resident T cells and that administration of higher doses may further enhance protection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015

Safety and Immunogenicity of DNA Vaccines Encoding Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus Wild-Type Glycoproteins in a Phase I Clinical Trial

Uzma N. Sarwar; Pamela Costner; Mary E. Enama; Nina M. Berkowitz; Zonghui Hu; Cynthia S. Hendel; Sandra Sitar; Sarah Plummer; Sabue Mulangu; Robert T. Bailer; Richard A. Koup; John R. Mascola; Gary J. Nabel; Nancy J. Sullivan; Barney S. Graham; Julie E. Ledgerwood

Background Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus cause severe hemorrhagic fever with high mortality and are potential bioterrorism agents. There are no available vaccines or therapeutic agents. Previous clinical trials evaluated transmembrane-deleted and point-mutation Ebolavirus glycoproteins (GPs) in candidate vaccines. Constructs evaluated in this trial encode wild-type (WT) GP from Ebolavirus Zaire and Sudan species and the Marburgvirus Angola strain expressed in a DNA vaccine. Methods The VRC 206 study evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of these DNA vaccines (4 mg administered intramuscularly by Biojector) at weeks 0, 4, and 8, with a homologous boost at or after week 32. Safety evaluations included solicited reactogenicity and coagulation parameters. Primary immune assessment was done by means of GP-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results The vaccines were well tolerated, with no serious adverse events; 80% of subjects had positive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay results (≥30) at week 12. The fourth DNA vaccination boosted the immune responses. Conclusions The investigational Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus WT GP DNA vaccines were safe, well tolerated, and immunogenic in this phase I study. These results will further inform filovirus vaccine research toward a goal of inducing protective immunity by using WT GP antigens in candidate vaccine regimens. Clinical Trials Registration NCT00605514.


The Lancet | 2015

Safety and immunogenicity of Ebola virus and Marburg virus glycoprotein DNA vaccines assessed separately and concomitantly in healthy Ugandan adults: a phase 1b, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial

Hannah Kibuuka; Nina M. Berkowitz; Monica Millard; Mary E. Enama; Allan Tindikahwa; A Sekiziyivu; Pamela Costner; Sandra Sitar; Deline Glover; Zonghui Hu; Gyan Joshi; Daphne Stanley; Meghan Kunchai; Leigh Anne Eller; Robert T. Bailer; Richard A. Koup; Gary J. Nabel; John R. Mascola; Nancy J. Sullivan; Barney S. Graham; Mario Roederer; Nelson L. Michael; Merlin L. Robb; Julie E. Ledgerwood

BACKGROUND Ebola virus and Marburg virus cause serious disease outbreaks with high case fatality rates. We aimed to assess the safety and immunogenicity of two investigational DNA vaccines, one (EBO vaccine) encoding Ebola virus Zaire and Sudan glycoproteins and one (MAR) encoding Marburg virus glycoprotein. METHODS RV 247 was a phase 1b, double-blinded, randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trial in Kampala, Uganda to examine the safety and immunogenicity of the EBO and MAR vaccines given individually and concomitantly. Healthy adult volunteers aged 18-50 years were randomly assigned (5:1) to receive three injections of vaccine or placebo at weeks 0, 4, and 8, with vaccine allocations divided equally between three active vaccine groups: EBO vaccine only, MAR vaccine only, and both vaccines. The primary study objective was to investigate the safety and tolerability of the vaccines, as assessed by local and systemic reactogenicity and adverse events. We also assessed immunogenicity on the basis of antibody responses (ELISA) and T-cell responses (ELISpot and intracellular cytokine staining assays) 4 weeks after the third injection. Participants and investigators were masked to group assignment. Analysis was based on the intention-to-treat principle. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00997607. FINDINGS 108 participants were enrolled into the study between Nov 2, 2009, and April 15, 2010. All 108 participants received at least one study injection (including 100 who completed the injection schedule) and were included in safety and tolerability analyses; 107 for whom data were available were included in the immunogenicity analyses. Study injections were well tolerated, with no significant differences in local or systemic reactions between groups. The vaccines elicited antibody and T-cell responses specific to the glycoproteins received and we detected no differences between the separate and concomitant use of the two vaccines. 17 of 30 (57%, 95% CI 37-75) participants in the EBO vaccine group had an antibody response to the Ebola Zaire glycoprotein, as did 14 of 30 (47%, 28-66) in the group that received both vaccines. 15 of 30 (50%, 31-69) participants in the EBO vaccine group had an antibody response to the Ebola Sudan glycoprotein, as did 15 of 30 (50%, 31-69) in the group that received both vaccines. Nine of 29 (31%, 15-51) participants in the MAR vaccine groups had an antibody response to the Marburg glycoprotein, as did seven of 30 (23%, 10-42) in the group that received both vaccines. 19 of 30 (63%, 44-80) participants in the EBO vaccine group had a T-cell response to the Ebola Zaire glycoprotein, as did 10 of 30 (33%, 17-53) in the group that received both vaccines. 13 of 30 (43%, 25-63) participants in the EBO vaccine group had a T-cell response to the Ebola Sudan glycoprotein, as did 10 of 30 (33%, 17-53) in the group that received both vaccines. 15 of 29 (52%, 33-71) participants in the MAR vaccine group had a T-cell response to the Marburg glycoprotein, as did 13 of 30 (43%, 25-63) in the group that received both vaccines. INTERPRETATION This study is the first Ebola or Marburg vaccine trial done in Africa, and the results show that, given separately or together, both vaccines were well tolerated and elicited antigen-specific humoral and cellular immune responses. These findings have contributed to the accelerated development of more potent Ebola virus vaccines that encode the same wild-type glycoprotein antigens as the EBO vaccine, which are being assessed during the 2014 Ebola virus disease outbreak in west Africa. FUNDING US Department of Defense Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program and US National Institutes of Health Intramural Research Program.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2014

DNA Vaccines Encoding Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus Wild Type Glycoproteins are Safe and Immunogenic in a Phase I Clinical Trial

Uzma N. Sarwar; Pamela Costner; Mary E. Enama; Nina M. Berkowitz; Zonghui Hu; Cynthia S. Hendel; Sandra Sitar; Sarah Plummer; Sabue Mulangu; Robert T. Bailer; Richard A. Koup; John R. Mascola; Gary J. Nabel; Nancy J. Sullivan; Barney S. Graham; Julie E. Ledgerwood; Ingelise J. Gordon; LaSonji A. Holman; Floreliz Mendoza; Laura Novik; Jamie G. Saunders; Kathy Zephir; Niraj Desai; Sheryl Young; Joseph P. Casazza; Brenda D. Larkin; Galina Yamshchikov; Olga Vasilenko; Phillip L. Gomez; Charla Andrews

Background Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus cause severe hemorrhagic fever with high mortality and are potential bioterrorism agents. There are no available vaccines or therapeutic agents. Previous clinical trials evaluated transmembrane-deleted and point-mutation Ebolavirus glycoproteins (GPs) in candidate vaccines. Constructs evaluated in this trial encode wild-type (WT) GP from Ebolavirus Zaire and Sudan species and the Marburgvirus Angola strain expressed in a DNA vaccine. Methods The VRC 206 study evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of these DNA vaccines (4 mg administered intramuscularly by Biojector) at weeks 0, 4, and 8, with a homologous boost at or after week 32. Safety evaluations included solicited reactogenicity and coagulation parameters. Primary immune assessment was done by means of GP-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results The vaccines were well tolerated, with no serious adverse events; 80% of subjects had positive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay results (≥30) at week 12. The fourth DNA vaccination boosted the immune responses. Conclusions The investigational Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus WT GP DNA vaccines were safe, well tolerated, and immunogenic in this phase I study. These results will further inform filovirus vaccine research toward a goal of inducing protective immunity by using WT GP antigens in candidate vaccine regimens. Clinical Trials Registration NCT00605514.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Attenuated PfSPZ Vaccine induces strain-transcending T cells and durable protection against heterologous controlled human malaria infection

Kirsten E. Lyke; Andrew S. Ishizuka; Andrea A. Berry; Sumana Chakravarty; Adam DeZure; Mary E. Enama; Eric R. James; Peter F. Billingsley; Anusha Gunasekera; Anita Manoj; Minglin Li; Adam Ruben; Tao Li; Abraham G. Eappen; Richard E. Stafford; Natasha Kc; Tooba Murshedkar; Floreliz Mendoza; Ingelise J. Gordon; Kathryn L. Zephir; LaSonji A. Holman; Sarah Plummer; Cynthia S. Hendel; Laura Novik; Pamela Costner; Jamie G. Saunders; Nina M. Berkowitz; Barbara J. Flynn; Martha Nason; Lindsay S. Garver

Significance A highly effective malaria vaccine capable of long-term protection against genetically diverse strains is urgently needed. Here, we demonstrate that a three-dose regimen of a live attenuated whole-parasite malaria vaccine conferred durable sterile protection through 33 weeks in ∼50% of subjects against a controlled human malaria infection strain that is heterologous to the vaccine strain. Prior studies by others and us have shown that T cells are critical to mediating sterile protection after live-attenuated malaria vaccination. Here, we provide evidence that this Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite vaccine (PfSPZ Vaccine) induces antigen-specific IFN-γ-producing CD8 and CD4 T cells that recognize both the homologous and the heterologous Pf strain. A live-attenuated malaria vaccine, Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite vaccine (PfSPZ Vaccine), confers sterile protection against controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) with Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) parasites homologous to the vaccine strain up to 14 mo after final vaccination. No injectable malaria vaccine has demonstrated long-term protection against CHMI using Pf parasites heterologous to the vaccine strain. Here, we conducted an open-label trial with PfSPZ Vaccine at a dose of 9.0 × 105 PfSPZ administered i.v. three times at 8-wk intervals to 15 malaria-naive adults. After CHMI with homologous Pf parasites 19 wk after final immunization, nine (64%) of 14 (95% CI, 35–87%) vaccinated volunteers remained without parasitemia compared with none of six nonvaccinated controls (P = 0.012). Of the nine nonparasitemic subjects, six underwent repeat CHMI with heterologous Pf7G8 parasites 33 wk after final immunization. Five (83%) of six (95% CI, 36–99%) remained without parasitemia compared with none of six nonvaccinated controls. PfSPZ-specific T-cell and antibody responses were detected in all vaccine recipients. Cytokine production by T cells from vaccinated subjects after in vitro stimulation with homologous (NF54) or heterologous (7G8) PfSPZ were highly correlated. Interestingly, PfSPZ-specific T-cell responses in the blood peaked after the first immunization and were not enhanced by subsequent immunizations. Collectively, these data suggest durable protection against homologous and heterologous Pf parasites can be achieved with PfSPZ Vaccine. Ongoing studies will determine whether protective efficacy can be enhanced by additional alterations in the vaccine dose and number of immunizations.


The Lancet | 2017

Safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of two Zika virus DNA vaccine candidates in healthy adults: randomised, open-label, phase 1 clinical trials

Martin R. Gaudinski; Katherine V. Houser; Kaitlyn M. Morabito; Zonghui Hu; Galina Yamshchikov; Ro Shauna Rothwell; Nina M. Berkowitz; Floreliz Mendoza; Jamie G. Saunders; Laura Novik; Cynthia S. Hendel; LaSonji A. Holman; Ingelise J. Gordon; Josephine H. Cox; Srilatha Edupuganti; Monica A. McArthur; Nadine Rouphael; Kirsten E. Lyke; Ginny E. Cummings; Sandra Sitar; Robert T. Bailer; Bryant M. Foreman; Katherine Burgomaster; Rebecca S. Pelc; David N. Gordon; Christina R. DeMaso; Kimberly A. Dowd; Carolyn M. Laurencot; Richard M. Schwartz; John R. Mascola

Summary Background The Zika virus epidemic and associated congenital infections have prompted rapid vaccine development. We assessed two new DNA vaccines expressing premembrane and envelope Zika virus structural proteins. Methods We did two phase 1, randomised, open-label trials involving healthy adult volunteers. The VRC 319 trial, done in three centres, assessed plasmid VRC5288 (Zika virus and Japanese encephalitis virus chimera), and the VRC 320, done in one centre, assessed plasmid VRC5283 (wild-type Zika virus). Eligible participants were aged 18–35 years in VRC19 and 18–50 years in VRC 320. Participants were randomly assigned 1:1 by a computer-generated randomisation schedule prepared by the study statistician. All participants received intramuscular injection of 4 mg vaccine. In VRC 319 participants were assigned to receive vaccinations via needle and syringe at 0 and 8 weeks, 0 and 12 weeks, 0, 4, and 8 weeks, or 0, 4, and 20 weeks. In VRC 320 participants were assigned to receive vaccinations at 0, 4, and 8 weeks via single-dose needle and syringe injection in one deltoid or split-dose needle and syringe or needle-free injection with the Stratis device (Pharmajet, Golden, CO, USA) in each deltoid. Both trials followed up volunteers for 24 months for the primary endpoint of safety, assessed as local and systemic reactogenicity in the 7 days after each vaccination and all adverse events in the 28 days after each vaccination. The secondary endpoint in both trials was immunogenicity 4 weeks after last vaccination. These trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, numbers NCT02840487 and NCT02996461. Findings VRC 319 enrolled 80 participants (20 in each group), and VRC 320 enrolled 45 participants (15 in each group). One participant in VRC 319 and two in VRC 320 withdrew after one dose of vaccine, but were included in the safety analyses. Both vaccines were safe and well tolerated. All local and systemic symptoms were mild to moderate. In both studies, pain and tenderness at the injection site was the most frequent local symptoms (37 [46%] of 80 participants in VRC 319 and 36 [80%] of 45 in VRC 320) and malaise and headache were the most frequent systemic symptoms (22 [27%] and 18 [22%], respectively, in VRC 319 and 17 [38%] and 15 [33%], respectively, in VRC 320). For VRC5283, 14 of 14 (100%) participants who received split-dose vaccinations by needle-free injection had detectable positive antibody responses, and the geometric mean titre of 304 was the highest across all groups in both trials. Interpretation VRC5283 was well tolerated and has advanced to phase 2 efficacy testing. Funding Intramural Research Program of the Vaccine Research Center, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.


Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics | 2014

Comparison of adaptive and innate immune responses induced by licensed vaccines for human papillomavirus

Douglas M. Herrin; Emily E. Coates; Pamela Costner; Troy J. Kemp; Martha Nason; Kapil K. Saharia; Yuanji Pan; Uzma N. Sarwar; LaSonji A. Holman; Galina Yamshchikov; Richard A. Koup; Yuk Ying S Pang; Robert A. Seder; John T. Schiller; Barney S. Graham; Ligia A. Pinto; Julie E. Ledgerwood

Two HPV virus-like particle (VLP) vaccines, HPV-16/18 (GlaxoSmithKline, Cervarix®) and HPV-6/11/16/18 (Merck, Gardasil®), are currently licensed in the United States. Given the similar antigenic content but different adjuvant formulations in the 2 vaccines, they provide an efficient method for evaluating adjuvants and comparing the kinetics of the innate and adaptive immune responses. We randomized women to receive either Cervarix® or Gardasil®, followed 6 month vaccination delivery schedules per manufacturers recommendations, and analyzed the humoral immune response, T cell response, and circulating plasma cytokine levels in response to vaccination. Cervarix® recipients had higher anti-HPV-16 antibody and neutralization titers at month 7, and elevated anti-HPV-18 antibody and neutralization titers at months 7 and 12. Antibody avidity was similar for the 2 vaccines. HPV-31 was the only phylogenetically related non-vaccine HPV type, for which there is evidence of cross-protection, to be cross-neutralized and only in response to Cervarix®. Comparing CD4+ T cell cytokine responses at month 12, there was a trend of increased levels of IL-2 and TNF-α in the Cervarix® groups versus the Gardasil® groups that was consistent across all 4 tested HPV types (16/18/33/45). Elevated levels of circulating plasma cytokine/chemokines were observed post first vaccination in Gardasil® recipients and proinflammatory cytokines were elevated following 1st and 3rd Cervarix® vaccinations. Cervarix® and Gardasil® are both highly immunogenic vaccines. Higher antibody levels and CD4 T cell responses were achieved with Cervarix® after 3 doses, although similar affinity maturation was measured for the 2 vaccines. The clinical implications of the differences in immune responses are unknown.

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Mary E. Enama

National Institutes of Health

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LaSonji A. Holman

National Institutes of Health

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Cynthia S. Hendel

National Institutes of Health

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Ingelise J. Gordon

National Institutes of Health

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Sarah Plummer

National Institutes of Health

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Floreliz Mendoza

National Institutes of Health

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Jamie G. Saunders

National Institutes of Health

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Laura Novik

National Institutes of Health

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Julie E. Ledgerwood

National Institutes of Health

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Barney S. Graham

National Institutes of Health

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