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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Clonal vaccinia virus grown in cell culture fully protects monkeys from lethal monkeypox challenge.

Journal:
Vaccine
Year:
2008
Authors:
Marriott, Kathleen A et al.
Affiliation:
Battelle Biomedical Research Center · United States

Abstract

The potential use of smallpox as an agent of bioterrorism has renewed interest in the development of a modern vaccine capable of replacing the standard Dryvax vaccine. Vaccinia virus (ACAM2000), clonally isolated from Dryvax and manufactured in cell culture, was tested for immunogenicity and protective activity in a non-human primate model. Cynomolgus monkeys vaccinated with ACAM2000, Dryvax, or ACAM2000 diluent (control) were challenged 2 months post-vaccination with a lethal, intravenous dose of monkeypox virus. ACAM2000 proved immunogenic and efficacious in protecting against lethal monkeypox challenge, as evident from a lack of post-challenge viral replication, and the absence of any significant clinical signs attributable to monkeypox infection. This protection correlated (with) neutralizing antibody titers equivalent to those generated in the Dryvax group post-vaccination, as well as a similar significant increase in the presence of neutralizing antibodies post-challenge. Control animals showed no signs of vaccine-induced seroconversion, displayed post-challenge tissue-associated viral replication and viremia, and developed severe monkeypox-specific clinical symptoms. The protective efficacy of ACAM2000 was found to be equivalent to the currently approved vaccine, Dryvax.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18077063/