Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
With the growing public health concerns of seasonal influenza and H1N1 in the United States, the primary means by which this can be addressed is with prevention, namely, vaccination against the influenza virus. The only individuals not able to receive this vaccination in the primary care provider's office are those patients with egg allergies and, in rare circumstances, individuals with allergies to other components of the vaccine. Current guidelines allow for the administration of the influenza vaccine to patients with egg allergy using vaccines with low egg protein (ovalbumin) content or by using skin testing followed by a 5-dose desensitization protocol. Since this is impractical to perform in the primary care office and cumbersome for allergists, many egg-allergic patients simply do not receive the influenza vaccine, leaving them more vulnerable to the disease and more likely to become a source of contagion.
Several studies have suggested that influenza vaccination using a 1-2 dose protocol may be safe. This fact is due in large part to the low ovalbumin (egg protein) content in modern influenza vaccines. All studies of influenza vaccination in egg-allergic patients have been done using intramuscular trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV). However, the trivalent live-attenuated, cold-adapted influenza vaccine (LAIV), which is delivered intranasally, has a lower published ovalbumin content than the injectable vaccines, suggesting that it may also be well-tolerated by egg-allergic patients. According to several studies, LAIV may be more efficacious than TIV in children.
It is the goal of the investigators to evaluate the safety of immunizing egg-allergic individuals with the LAIV.
Full description
Patients with egg allergy will be recruited into the study. Since the trivalent live-attenuated, cold-adapted influenza vaccine (LAIV) contains the lowest amount of egg protein of all available influenza vaccines on the market, those who are eligible to receive the intranasal formulation (LAIV group) (ie age 2-49y, not asthmatic) will receive FluMist; others will receive the intramuscular injection in a single dose without skin testing (TIV group). All subjects will be monitored for 30 minutes post-vaccine for any signs/symptoms of an immediate allergic reaction. Subjects will also be followed-up by phone 24-48 hours after administration to assess for any delayed allergic reaction. Data will be collected for one entire Influenza season (2010-2011).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Age > 6 months
Clinical history of allergic symptoms (hives, swelling, vomiting, respiratory problems, low blood pressure) within 2 hours after ingestion of egg OR Eczema/atopic dermatitis worsened by egg exposure
Confirmation of clinical history by positive egg skin prick test or serum egg-specific IgE or a positive oral food challenge. [The >95% positive predictive values of egg serum IgE in subjects >2 years old with atopic dermatitis is 6 kU/L or greater. In subjects >2 years old without atopic dermatitis, the value is 7 kU/L or greater. In subjects less than 2 years old, the value is 2 kU/L or greater.]
FluMist (LAIV) cohort: Patients age 2-49 years WITHOUT a history of asthma symptoms or treatment within the past 12 months will receive intranasal FluMist.
Flu Shot (TIV) Intramuscular influenza vaccine cohort: Patients 6 months to 2 yrs or > 49 years or WITH a history of asthma symptoms / treatment within the past 12 months. History/Treatment of asthma in the past 12 months is defined as follows:
Exclusion criteria
Subjects who potentially have outgrown their egg allergy (no allergic reaction with ingestion of whole egg in the past 18 months and an egg serum specific IgE level ≤2 kU/L).
Pregnancy
Current moderate to severe illness with a fever.
Allergy to other components of the vaccine - gentamicin, gelatin, arginine, thimerosal - or a history of a previous allergic reaction to the influenza vaccine.
Abnormal Vital Signs.
History of Guillain-Barre' Syndrome (GBS).
HIV/AIDS or another disease that affects the immune system, or cancer.
Long term health problems that are contraindicated for the LAIV or TIV.
Receipt of a live viral vaccine within the month prior (e.g. FluMist, MMR, yellow fever, chicken pox, rotavirus, smallpox).
Current use of any prescription medicine (e.g. antiviral) to prevent or treat influenza. (only excludes use of LAIV, may still receive TIV)
Concurrent use of aspirin or aspirin-containing therapy in children and adolescents (2-18 years of age)(only excludes use of LAIV, may still receive TIV)
Living with or having close contact with someone whose immune system is severely compromised (e.g. transplant recipient). (only excludes use of LAIV, may still receive TIV) Breastfeeding mothers may still receive either LAIV or TIV.
The following medications can interfere with signs of an allergic reaction or complicate the treatment of an allergic reaction and should be discontinued as outlined below:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
17 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal