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Chapter category: Vaccines

Neisseria meningitidis Vaccines

This chapter appears in the following book:

New Bacterial Vaccines

Edited by: Ronald W. Ellis and Bernard R. Brodeur
ISBN: 0-306-47832-3
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «

Chapter authors:
Carl E. Frasch and Margaret C. Bash

Meningococcal disease, both endemic and epidemic, remains a major cause of meningitis in many countries. Protective immunity is mediated primarily by bactericidal antibodies against the capsular polysaccharides as well as against outer membrane protein and lipopolysaccharide components. This article focuses on the new conjugate vaccines for serogroups A, C, Y and W135 as well as the latest approaches to development of group B vaccines. Group C meningococcal polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccines have been used in the United Kingdom since November 1999 and are over 90% effective in both infants and children. Outer membrane protein vaccines have shown good efficacy against group B in individuals over 4 years of age, but most group B disease occurs in younger children. Newer group B vaccines are under development using new immunization regimens, individual outer membrane proteins and lipopolysaccharide conjugates. The problem of a universally effective group B vaccine may require new avenues of research.

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Additional chapters from this book:

Neisseria meningitidis Vaccines

Carl E. Frasch and Margaret C. Bash

Meningococcal disease, both endemic and epidemic, remains a major cause of meningitis in many countries. Protective immunity is mediated primarily by bactericidal antibodies against the capsular pol...

Vaccines against Vibrio cholerae

James D. Campbell and James B. Kaper

Cholera, the acute diarrheal disease caused by Vibrio cholerae serogroups O1 and O139, continues to cause endemic disease and epidemic outbreaks in many parts of the world. The highest incidence of ...

Typhoid Vaccines

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Uli Fruth and Michael J. Brennan

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Streptococcus pneumoniae Vaccines

James C. Paton and David E. Briles

Almost sixty years after the advent of penicillin, Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) continues to cause more deaths from invasive infections (pneumonia, meningitis and bacteremia) than any...

Staphylococcus aureus Vaccine

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A Vaccine for Nontypable Haemophilus influenzae

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Moraxella catarrhalis

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The recognition of Moraxella catarrhalis in the past two decades as an important human respiratory tract pathogen has stimulated much interest in research on the organism. Recent work has unequivoca...

Lyme Disease Vaccine

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Helicobacter pylori Vaccines

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Group A Streptococcus Vaccine Research: Historical Synopsis and New Insights

Sean D. Reid, Kimmo Virtaneva and James M. Musser

Streptococcus pyogenes, commonly referenced to as Lancefield group A Streptococcus (GAS), is a gram positive human pathogen that causes a variety of diseases including pharyngitis, scarlet fever, ne...

A Vaccine for Gonorrhea

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In the last two decades, discoveries in biological sciences have allowed vaccine research to expand rapidly. Progress in the understanding of the regulatory mechanisms of the immune response to infe...

Genomics and Proteomics in Vaccine Design

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In 1881, Louis Pasteur, the father of bacterial vaccines and immunology, demonstrated publicly the first vaccine against a bacterial infection. His vaccine, against anthrax in sheep, consisted of Ba...


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