Transient Facial Nerve Paralysis (Bell's Palsy) following Intranasal Delivery of a Genetically Detoxified Mutant of Escherichia coli Heat Labile Toxin
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 16 September 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 4 (9) , e6999
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006999
Abstract
An association was previously established between facial nerve paralysis (Bell's palsy) and intranasal administration of an inactivated influenza virosome vaccine containing an enzymatically active Escherichia coli Heat Labile Toxin (LT) adjuvant. The individual component(s) responsible for paralysis were not identified, and the vaccine was withdrawn. Subjects participating in two contemporaneous non-randomized Phase 1 clinical trials of nasal subunit vaccines against Human Immunodeficiency Virus and tuberculosis, both of which employed an enzymatically inactive non-toxic mutant LT adjuvant (LTK63), underwent active follow-up for adverse events using diary-cards and clinical examination. Two healthy subjects experienced transient peripheral facial nerve palsies 44 and 60 days after passive nasal instillation of LTK63, possibly a result of retrograde axonal transport after neuronal ganglioside binding or an inflammatory immune response, but without exaggerated immune responses to LTK63. While the unique anatomical predisposition of the facial nerve to compression suggests nasal delivery of neuronal-binding LT–derived adjuvants is inadvisable, their continued investigation as topical or mucosal adjuvants and antigens appears warranted on the basis of longstanding safety via oral, percutaneous, and other mucosal routes.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Use of a patch containing heat-labile toxin from Escherichia coli against travellers' diarrhoea: a phase II, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled field trialThe Lancet, 2008
- Rational design of nasal vaccinesJournal of Drug Targeting, 2008
- “All that palsies is not Bell's [1]”—The need to define Bell's palsy as an adverse event following immunizationVaccine, 2007
- Phase I Evaluation of Intranasal Trivalent Inactivated Influenza Vaccine with Nontoxigenic Escherichia coli Enterotoxin and Novel Biovector as Mucosal Adjuvants, Using Adult VolunteersJournal of Virology, 2006
- Bell's palsy with ipsilateral numbnessJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 2005
- Bell's palsyBMJ, 2005
- Use of the Inactivated Intranasal Influenza Vaccine and the Risk of Bell's Palsy in SwitzerlandNew England Journal of Medicine, 2004
- Bell's Palsy: The Spontaneous Course of 2,500 Peripheral Facial Nerve Palsies of Different EtiologiesActa Oto-Laryngologica, 2002
- The early cellular and humoral immune response to primary and booster oral immunization with cholera toxin B subunitEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1991
- Selective retrograde transsynaptic transfer of a protein, tetanus toxin, subsequent to its retrograde axonal transportThe Journal of cell biology, 1979