2013
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2012.00170
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Approaches to vaccines against Orientia tsutsugamushi

Abstract: Scrub typhus is a severe mite-borne infection caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi, an obligately intracellular bacterium closely related to Rickettsia. The disease explains a substantial proportion of acute undifferentiated febrile cases that require hospitalization in rural areas of Asia, the North of Australia, and many islands of the Pacific Ocean. Delayed antibiotic treatment is common due to the lack of effective commercially available diagnostic tests and the lack of specificity of the early clinical presen… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(95 citation statements)
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References 189 publications
(174 reference statements)
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“…Clinical presentation in patients varies from an asymptomatic to a life-threatening disease, including acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute liver failure [2]. To date, no effective and reliable human vaccine against scrub typhus is available [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinical presentation in patients varies from an asymptomatic to a life-threatening disease, including acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute liver failure [2]. To date, no effective and reliable human vaccine against scrub typhus is available [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Approaches have included the use of formalin-killed Orientia, inoculation with viable organisms followed by antimicrobial treatment, irradiated O. tsutsugamushi, and subunit vaccines. 72,[93][94][95][96] The results have varied from short-term protection to failure to protect. Protection was frequently defined as preventing death but not protecting from illness.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent review article has addressed the history of vaccine development for scrub typhus and its current status. 95 Current approaches should aim to understand why the natural immune response against Orientia does not produce sterilizing, long-lasting, and cross-protective immunity. The naturally induced immune response seems inappropriate and is hampered by the immunodominance of antigens encoded by genes that are not conserved across the large number of Orientia strains.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Proposal for development of an effective and safe vaccine for scrub typhus include a new approach with a strong focus on T-cell mediated immunity, empirical testing of the immunogenicity of proteins encoded by conserved genes and assessment of protection in relevant animal models that truly mimic human scrub typhus [30].…”
Section: Future Prospects Of Vaccine Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%