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A single arm, open-label, non-randomized, interventional phase 3 study to measure safety and effectiveness of a heterologous, two dose preventative vaccine (Ad26. ZEBOV, MVA-BN®-Filo) against Ebola Virus Disease.
Full description
Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) is an acute, systemic, febrile syndrome caused by Ebola viruses. EVD has a case fatality ranging from 30% to 90% and spreads by direct contact with body fluids of symptomatic patients.
During the 2013-16 Ebola outbreak in Guinea, a Phase 3 cluster-randomised ring-vaccination trial using single-dose rVSV-ZEBOV-GP investigational vaccine reported 100% efficacy in protection against EVD. In 2016, the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization recommended the rapid deployment of rVSV-ZEBOV-GP in case of an EVD outbreak under an Expanded Access (compassionate use) protocol, with informed consent and Good Clinical Practice (GCP) compliance.
A new EVD outbreak started in North Kivu and Ituri provinces in the Democratic Republic of Congo in July 2018. Despite extensive control measures, including vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV-GP in active outbreak areas, the outbreak has continued and WHO declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on 17 July 2019. The ongoing outbreak has prompted consideration of additional vaccine candidates that might assist in preventing the spread of this infection to currently unaffected communities.
This study will investigate population-level vaccination with a two-dose prophylactic vaccine against Ebola, the Ad26.ZEBOV, MVA-BN-Filo vaccine that has been extensively studied in 11 previous safety and immunogenicity trials. This will be done by offering vaccination first to communities that neighbour the outbreak area or that are located on transport routes from the edge of the outbreak area to major centres like Goma.
In this study, approximately 500,000 healthy adults and children will be given the two-dose candidate vaccine regimen VAC52150 that consists of two vaccines, Ad26.ZEBOV and MVA-BN®-Filo, administered at an interval of 56 days (-14 day +28 day). Safety will be assessed in a safety subset of 1000 individuals and a pregnancy subset of up to 500 pregnant women will be followed to delivery. The first 100 infants born to these pregnant participants will be given a clinical examination at 3 months post-delivery. The study will estimate vaccine coverage of dose 1 and dose 2 overall and in different target groups and will also examine the knowledge and perceptions of persons eligible for large-scale delivery of a preventative Ebola vaccine with a two-dose vaccine strategy. The effectiveness of the vaccination on EVD will be determined through a test-negative case control study. The target sample size for the primary effectiveness evaluation is 110 laboratory-confirmed EVD cases.
An exploratory objective is to assess the immune response at before the second dose and 21 days after the second dose (MVN-BN-Filo) in a subgroup of 50 adults and 50 children who receive dose 2 beyond the recommended 56-day interval.
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20,426 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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