4.4 Review

Progress towards the development of a P. vivax vaccine

Journal

EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 97-112

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14760584.2021.1880898

Keywords

Clinical trials; heterologous prime; boost immunizations; viral vectors; virus-like particles; vivax vaccines

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AI064478, R01AI137162]

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Malaria is a significant public health issue, and the development of a vaccine for Plasmodium vivax faces challenges due to the complex life cycle and technical difficulties. An effective vaccine should prevent disease and transmission, ideally providing complete immune protection.
Introduction Plasmodium vivax causes significant public health problems in endemic regions. A vaccine to prevent disease is critical, considering the rapid spread of drug-resistant parasite strains, and the development of hypnozoites in the liver with potential for relapse. A minimally effective vaccine should prevent disease and transmission while an ideal vaccine provides sterile immunity. Areas covered Despite decades of research, the complex life cycle, technical challenges and a lack of funding have hampered progress of P. vivax vaccine development. Here, we review the progress of potential P. vivax vaccine candidates from different stages of the parasite life cycle. We also highlight the challenges and important strategies for rational vaccine design. These factors can significantly increase immune effector mechanisms and improve the protective efficacy of these candidates in clinical trials to generate sustained protection over longer periods of time. Expert opinion A vaccine that presents functionally-conserved epitopes from multiple antigens from various stages of the parasite life cycle is key to induce broadly neutralizing strain-transcending protective immunity to effectively disrupt parasite development and transmission.

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