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Publication
Featured researches published by Teresita Serrano.
Vaccine | 2001
Herio Toledo; Alberto Baly; Osvaldo Castro; Sonia Resik; José Laferté; Felipe Rolo; Leonor Navea; Lenor Lobaina; Otto Cruz; Johandra Miguez; Teresita Serrano; Beatriz Sierra; Liliana Pérez; Maria Elena Ricardo; Marta Dubed; Ana Luisa Lubián; Madelı́n Blanco; Juan Carlos Millán; Abraham Ortega; Enrique Iglesias; Eduardo Pentón; Zonia Martı́n; Jorge Pérez; Manuel Diaz; Carlos Duarte
A phase I clinical trial was performed to examine the safety and immunogenicity of a multi-epitope polypeptide comprising the central 15 amino acids of the V3 loop from six HIV-1 isolates. This protein called TAB9 was emulsified in Montanide ISA720 (Seppic, Paris) and administered intramuscularly at doses of 0, 0.2 and 1 mg to 24 healthy, HIV-1 seronegative adult males. Three immunisations were given at months 0, 1 and 6 in a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled clinical trial. The placebo was generally well tolerated. However, severe local reactions were observed in TAB9 vaccinated subjects after the second and third inoculations. Seven out of eight volunteers from the lower dose group showed moderate or severe local inflammation, while four out of eight subjects from the higher dose group developed granulomas and sterile abscesses. In general, the reactogenicity depended on the number of inoculations given and the dose of TAB9. Both doses were immunogenic, all immunised volunteers seroconverted and antibodies were broadly reactive against the V3 peptides included in the protein. All vaccines sera reacted against gp120 in Western blot and 50% of them also neutralised at least one out of five laboratory isolates tested. No differences between doses were found. Anti TAB9 lymphoproliferative responses were observed, being more intense in the high dose group. Due to the strong local reactions that were found in this study, a change in the formulation will be required for further trials with this vaccine candidate in humans.
Infection and Immunity | 2005
Luis García; Manuel Díaz Jidy; Hilda García; Boris L. Rodríguez; Roberto Fernández; Gemma Año; Bárbara Cedré; Tania Valmaseda; Edith Suzarte; Margarita Ramírez; Yadira Pino; Javier Campos; Jorge Menéndez; Rodrigo Valera; Daniel González González; Irma González; Oliver Pérez; Teresita Serrano; Miriam Lastre; Fernando Miralles; Judith del Campo; Maestre Jl; José Luis Monereo Pérez; Arturo Talavera; Antonio Pérez; Karen Marrero; Talena Ledón; Rafael Fando
ABSTRACT Vibrio cholerae 638 is a living candidate cholera vaccine strain attenuated by deletion of the CTXΦ prophage from C7258 (O1, El Tor Ogawa) and by insertion of the Clostridium thermocellum endoglucanase A gene into the hemagglutinin/protease coding sequence. This vaccine candidate was previously found to be well tolerated and immunogenic in volunteers. This article reports a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted to test short-term protection conferred by 638 against subsequent V. cholerae infection and disease in volunteers in Cuba. A total of 45 subjects were enrolled and assigned to receive vaccine or placebo. The vaccine contained 109 CFU of freshly harvested 638 buffered with 1.3% NaHCO3, while the placebo was buffer alone. After vaccine but not after placebo intake, 96% of volunteers had at least a fourfold increase in vibriocidal antibody titers, and 50% showed a doubling of at least the lipopolysaccharide-specific immunoglobulin A titers in serum. At 1 month after vaccination, five volunteers from the vaccine group and five from the placebo group underwent an exploratory challenge study with 109 CFU of ΔCTXΦ attenuated mutant strain V. cholerae 81. Only two volunteers from the vaccine group shed strain 81 in their feces, but none of them experienced diarrhea; in the placebo group, all volunteers excreted the challenge strain, and three had reactogenic diarrhea. An additional 12 vaccinees and 9 placebo recipients underwent challenge with 7 × 105 CFU of virulent strain V. cholerae 3008 freshly harvested from a brain heart infusion agar plate and buffered with 1.3% NaHCO3. Three volunteers (25%) from the vaccine group and all from the placebo group shed the challenge agent in their feces. None of the 12 vaccinees but 7 volunteers from the placebo group had diarrhea, and 2 of the latter exhibited severe cholera (>5,000 g of diarrheal stool). These results indicate that at 1 month after ingestion of a single oral dose (109 CFU) of strain 638, volunteers remained protected against cholera infection and disease provoked by the wild-type challenge agent V. cholerae 3008. We recommend that additional vaccine lots of 638 be prepared under good manufacturing practices for further evaluation.
Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry | 2001
Antonio Pérez; Félix Dickinson; Zurina Cinza; Aroldo Ruíz; Teresita Serrano; Jorge Sosa; Sonia González; Yainelis Gutiérrez; Consuelo Nazábal; Oderay Gutiérrez; Daymi Guzmán; Manuel Diaz; Maité Delgado; Evelin Caballero; Gretel Sardiñas; Anabel Álvarez; Alejandro Martín; Gerardo Guillén; Ricardo Silva
P64k is a meningococcal protein from Neisseria meningitidis that has been obtained by recombinant DNA technology. Recombinant P64k has been extensively characterized by physicochemical and immunological methods. Lately this protein has been found to act as a versatile immunological carrier for weak antigens in mice. In the present work, a Phase I clinical trial was carried out in healthy volunteers who received three inoculations of either placebo or recombinant P64k (20 or 50 μg). No severe adverse events occurred during the trial. Only mild adverse events in ten volunteers were observed. At 1 month after the third dose, 15 out of 18 volunteers (83.3%) who received the recombinant antigen had a P64k‐specific antibody titre 1:100, as detected by ELISA. A fourth dose, given 9 months after the third one, elicited a potent booster immune response in P64k vaccinees. Accordingly, these P64k formulations were considered safe and immunogenic in healthy human volunteers.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2006
Gilda Toraño; María Eugenia Toledo; Alberto Baly; Violeta Fernandez-Santana; Francisco J. Rodriguez; Yunia Alvarez; Teresita Serrano; Alexis Musachio; Ibis Hernández; Eugenio Hardy; A. Rodríguez; Héctor J. Aguado Hernández; A. Aguilar; Raydel Sánchez; Manuel Diaz; Verena Muzio; Jorgelina Dfana; María Cruz Rodríguez; Lazaro Heynngnezz; Vicente Verez-Bencomo
ABSTRACT Since 1989, we have been involved in the development of a vaccine against Haemophilus influenzae type b. The new vaccine is based on the conjugation of synthetic oligosaccharides to tetanus toxoid. Our main goals have been (i) to verify the feasibility of using the synthetic antigen and (ii) to search for new production alternatives for this important infant vaccine. Overall, eight trials have already been conducted with adults, children (4 to 5 years old), and infants. We have described herein the details from the first two phase I clinical trials conducted with human adult volunteers under double blind, randomized conditions. The participants each received a single intramuscular injection to evaluate safety and initial immunogenicity. We have found an excellent safety profile and an antibody response similar to the one observed for the control vaccine.
Vaccine | 2009
Rodrigo Valera; Hilda García; Manuel Díaz Jidy; Mayelín Mirabal; Marlene Armesto; Rafael Fando; Luis García; Roberto Fernández; Gemma Año; Bárbara Cedré; Margarita Ramírez; Laura Bravo; Teresita Serrano; Sara Palma; Daniel González; Fernando Miralles; Vilma Medina; Felicita Nuñez; Yilian Plasencia; Juan Carlos Martínez; Aleyda Mandarioti; Juan Lugones; Boris L. Rodríguez; A. Moreno; Domingo González; Morelia Baró; Rosa L. Solís; Gustavo Sierra; Ramón Barberá; Francisco Domínguez
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity and the immunogenicity of a 2 x 10(9)CFU dose of the 638 lyophilized live attenuated cholera vaccine for oral administration, formulated and produced at Finlay Institute, City of Havana, Cuba. Thirty-six healthy female and male adult volunteers from 18 to 40 years old were involved, clinically examined and laboratory tested after the informed consent signature. Adverse events were monitored and seroconversion rates and geometrical mean titer (GMT) of vibriocidal antibodies were tested in volunteers sera samples. Neither serious adverse events nor other damages to the volunteers due to vaccine or placebo feeding were reported during the clinical follow-up period of this study; none of the adverse events registered within the first 72 h after inoculation were life-threatening for volunteers. Neither severe nor moderate adverse events were reported. Sixty-one percent of subjects showed mild expected adverse events in an interval lower than 24h up to the first 72 h, 75% of these in the vaccinated group and 18% in the placebo group. Fourteen days after inoculation the GMT of vibriocidal antibodies in the vaccine group significantly increased in comparison to the placebo group. All subjects in the vaccine group (24) seroconverted (100%). Results show that this vaccine is safe, well tolerated and immunogenic in healthy female and male volunteers.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2003
María G. Guzmán; Rayner Rodríguez; Rosmari Rodríguez; Lisset Hermida; Mayling Alvarez; Laura Lazo; Mayra Muné; Delfina Rosario; Katia Valdés; Susana Vázquez; Rafael Galera Martínez; Teresita Serrano; Jorge Páez; Raúl Espinosa; Tania Pumariega; Gerardo Guillén
Archive | 2005
Daniel González; Raiza Martínez; Osvaldo Castro; Teresita Serrano; Daniel Portela; Susana Vázquez; Gustavo Kourí; María G. Guzmán
Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2006
Antonio Pérez; Félix Dickinson; Francisco Banderas; Teresita Serrano; Rafael Llanes; Daymi Guzmán; Pablo Díaz; Anabel Álvarez; María Guirola; Evelin Caballero; Leonardo Canaan-Haden; Gerardo Guillén
Journal of Hepatology | 2018
A. Lué; S. Lorente; F.J. Aranguren; L. Cortes Garcia; A. García-Gil; Teresita Serrano
Revista Cubana de Hematología, Inmunología y Hemoterapia | 2000
Ananidia Rivero; Liliana Pérez; Alejandro Álvarez; Yondel Torranzo; Teresita Serrano; Rafael Magadán; Lilia Suárez
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Centro de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico en Electroquímica
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