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A Challenge Study to Assess the Blood-stage Efficacy of Full-length SUM-101 Malaria Vaccine Candidate (CHMI-SUM-101)

E

European Vaccine Initiative

Status and phase

Begins enrollment in 1 month
Phase 1

Conditions

Malaria Fever

Treatments

Biological: SUM-101
Biological: Verorab®
Other: CHMI

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07124156
EVI-CT-002

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of the study is to test the efficacy using a homologous CHMI of this vaccine candidate early in the development path in a population living in malaria-endemic areas.

In the previous Phase Ia and Ib trials, no efficacy endpoints were defined, and therefore there is currently no data on the SUM-101 vaccine efficacy. The proposed clinical trial will enrol malaria pre-exposed healthy adults and will be the second trial where the IMP will be administered to healthy adult participants in Tanzania with some pre-existing immunity against malaria.

The vaccination part of this study will be performed in a randomised, double-blinded, controlled design to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of the candidate malaria vaccine SUM-101 (MSP1 with GLA-SE as adjuvant). Given that SUM-101 is a malaria vaccine with an important blood-stage component, we propose to use CHMI with the 3D7 P. falciparum strain-infected red blood cells to establish initial vaccine efficacy data after the third vaccination in a malaria-exposed population.

Full description

Full-length MSP1/GLA-SE (SUM-101) malaria vaccine (formerly SumayaVac-1) has been developed by Sumaya Biotech, a spin-off from Heidelberg University, Germany. SUM-101 is a vaccine based on the 3D7 strain (D-form) of full-length merozoite surface protein 1 (full-length MSP1). The full-length MSP1 is expressed as a recombinant heterodimeric protein in E. coli and lyophilised at 150 μg/vial. The lyophilised MSP1 protein is stored at 2 - 8°C. The adjuvant, GLA-SE, was developed by Access to Advanced Health Institute (AAHI), a Washington non-profit corporation with offices at 1616 Eastlake Ave. E, Suite 400, Seattle, WA 98102, USA. It is a stable oil-in-water emulsion containing a synthetic analogue of bacterial glucopyranosyl lipid A and functions as a toll-like receptor 4 agonist. A vial of the adjuvant contains 20μg of GLA-SE in a 400μl emulsion. GLA-SE adjuvant and emulsion formulations should be stored at 2 - 8°C.

The vaccine (SUM-101) is prepared before administration by reconstituting the lyophilised protein in saline (aqueous 0.9% NaCl) and then combining it with the GLA-SE adjuvant. The formulated vaccine is stable at room temperature for up to 60 minutes and administered intramuscularly.

A Phase I first-in-human, double-blinded, randomised trial (PMC6994672) was conducted to assess the safety and immunogenicity of SUM-101 in healthy malaria-naïve adult volunteers in Heidelberg, Germany. The trial demonstrated that SUM-101 is safe, with no serious adverse events (SAE) reported. Vaccination with SUM-101 induced MSP1 specific IgG and IgM antibodies that activated Fc-mediated effector mechanisms and were equally reactive against the vaccine variant (MSP1D/3D7) and a heterologous variant of MSP1 (MSP1F/FCB1). In addition, a Phase Ib trial was conducted in Bagamoyo, Tanzania (NCT05644067, data not yet published) where 20 healthy Tanzanian adults were vaccinated with SUM-101. Preliminary results indicate that SUM-101 is safe and well-tolerated in healthy African adults living in malaria-endemic areas, with ongoing assessments of antibody responses.

Concurrently with this trial, a Phase Ib, randomised, controlled age de-escalation, dose-finding study to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of full-length MSP1/GLA-SE (SUM-101) malaria vaccine in healthy young children, and infants (NCT06618885) will be conducted in Burkina Faso. The protocol has been submitted for ethical and regulatory approval in Burkina Faso.

Enrollment

24 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Written informed consent obtained before any study procedure.
  • Literate participants aged ≥18 - ≤45 years of African origin.
  • Female and male participants willing to practice effective contraception from 4 weeks before 1st vaccination (female participants only) and up to 12 weeks after the last vaccination or CHMI (female and male participants)
  • Female participants must be willing to undergo multiple serum pregnancy tests.
  • Available to participate in follow-up for the duration of the study, including the CHMI in-patient confinement period.
  • Contactable by phone during the whole study period.
  • At least two years of residence in the Bagamoyo district or nearby districts in the Coastal and Dar-es-Salaam regions and planning to reside there for at least 9 more months.
  • Agreement to provide personal contact information and contact information of another household member or close friend.
  • Confirmation of understanding of design, procedures, risks and benefits of the study by scoring 10 out of 10 in a structured ten questions with a maximum of two attempts.
  • General good health based on assessment of medical history and clinical examination.
  • The volunteer agrees to refrain from blood donation for 12 months following CHMI.
  • Volunteer agrees to refrain from intensive physical exercise (disproportionate to the volunteer's usual daily activity or exercise routine) during the malaria challenge period.

Exclusion criteria

  • Previous participation in any malaria vaccine trial in the last 3 years.
  • Participation in any other clinical trial involving investigational medicinal products within 30 days prior to the screening assessment.
  • Previous history of drug or alcohol abuse interfering with normal social function within one year prior to enrolment.
  • Previous vaccination with a rabies vaccine.
  • High anti-schizont antibody level as measured by ELISA at screening.
  • Intake of chronic medication, especially immunosuppressive agents (steroids, immunomodulating drugs) during the 13 weeks preceding the screening visit or during the study period.
  • Known hypersensitivity to any of the vaccine components (adjuvant or protein) or anti-malarial treatments.
  • Body mass index (BMI) of ≤18 or ≥30 Kg/m2.
  • Participants are unable to be closely followed for social, geographic or psychological reasons.
  • Any vaccination from 4 weeks prior to the 1st vaccination and (none planned) up to 8 weeks after the 3rd vaccination.
  • Any history, or evidence at screening, of clinically significant symptoms, physical signs or laboratory values suggestive of systemic disorders, including renal, hepatic, cardiovascular, pulmonary, skin, immunodeficiency, neurological, psychiatric, allergy, endocrine, malignant, haematological, infectious disease, epilepsy and other conditions, which could interfere with the interpretation of the trial results or compromise the health of the participants.
  • Abnormal electrocardiogram on screening: pathologic Q wave and significant ST-T wave changes, left ventricular hypertrophy, clinically significant arrhythmias, left bundle branch block, secondary or tertiary A-V (atrio-ventricular) heart block.
  • Any clinically significant laboratory values at screening outside of normal ranges for study participants.
  • Malaria positivity at screening (microscopy or qPCR positive).
  • Positive HIV, Hepatitis B (HBV) or Hepatitis C (HCV) tests. (The testing will only be requested on the discretion of clinician)
  • For females: Positive pregnancy test or actively breastfeeding.
  • Any recent or current systemic therapy with an antibiotic or drug with potential antimalarial activity (chloroquine, doxycycline, tetracycline, piperaquine, benzodiazepine, flunarizine, fluoxetine, tetracycline, azithromycin, clindamycin, erythromycin, hydroxychloroquine, etc.) (allowable time frame for use at investigators discretion or within a month prior to 1st vaccination or CHMI )
  • History of drug or alcohol abuse interfering with normal social function in the period of one year prior to study onset.
  • Known hypersensitivity to or contra-indications (including co-medication) for use of chloroquine, artemether-lumefantrine, Primaquine or history of severe (allergic) reactions to blood transfusion.
  • Being an employee or relative of an employee of Ifakara Health Institute.
  • Any other condition or situation that would, in the opinion of the investigator, place the volunteer at an unacceptable risk of injury or render the volunteer unable to meet the requirements of the protocol

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

24 participants in 2 patient groups

Three dose SUM-101
Experimental group
Description:
Twelve participants will receive three monthly inoculations (on D0, D28 and D56) with the IMP, SUM-101.
Treatment:
Other: CHMI
Biological: SUM-101
Three dose Verorab
Active Comparator group
Description:
12 participants will receive three monthly inoculations (on D0, D28 and D56) with the IMP Verorab®
Treatment:
Biological: Verorab®
Other: CHMI

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Irene Nkumama, PhD; Souyet Chang Rodríguez, PhD/MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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