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Stéphane Pillet

Researcher at McGill University Health Centre

Publications -  18
Citations -  873

Stéphane Pillet is an academic researcher from McGill University Health Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immunogenicity & Vaccination. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 18 publications receiving 481 citations. Previous affiliations of Stéphane Pillet include Montreal General Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Phase 1 randomized trial of a plant-derived virus-like particle vaccine for COVID-19.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report Day 42 interim safety and immunogenicity data from an observer-blinded, dose escalation, randomized controlled study of a virus-like particle vaccine candidate produced in plants that displays the SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (CoVLP: NCT04450004 ).
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A plant-derived quadrivalent virus like particle influenza vaccine induces cross-reactive antibody and T cell response in healthy adults.

TL;DR: Plant-based QVLP offers an attractive alternative manufacturing method for producing effective and HA-strain matching seasonal influenza vaccines and induced a substantial and sustained increase of hemagglutinin-specific polyfunctional CD4 T cells.
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Efficacy, immunogenicity, and safety of a plant-derived, quadrivalent, virus-like particle influenza vaccine in adults (18–64 years) and older adults (≥65 years): two multicentre, randomised phase 3 trials

TL;DR: Two phase 3 efficacy studies of a recombinant quadrivalent virus-like particle (QVLP) influenza vaccine manufactured in plants in adults aged 18-64 years and 65-plus, showing relative vaccine efficacy to prevent laboratory-confirmed influenza-like illness caused by any influenza strain are described.
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Immunogenicity and safety of a quadrivalent plant-derived virus like particle influenza vaccine candidate—Two randomized Phase II clinical trials in 18 to 49 and ≥50 years old adults

TL;DR: Overall, the 30 μg dose produced the most consistent humoral and cellular responses in both 18–49 and ≥50 years old subjects, strongly supporting the clinical development of this candidate vaccine.
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Influenza virus-like particle vaccines made in Nicotiana benthamiana elicit durable, poly-functional and cross-reactive T cell responses to influenza HA antigens.

TL;DR: Results show that plant-made HA VLP vaccines elicit both strong antibody responses and poly-functional, cross-reactive memory T cells that persist for at least 6 months after vaccination.