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About
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the food supplement called Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) may help boost the effectiveness of the nasal flu vaccine. Preliminary data from several studies of healthy volunteers suggest that LGG boosts the immune response to vaccines. Fifty-two subjects will be recruited into the study, all will receive the nasal flu vaccine. Twenty-six will receive capsules that contain LGG, 26 will receive placebo capsules. Blood and nasal specimens will be collected weekly for four weeks and at eight weeks to evaluate the initial mucosal and systemic immune response to the immunization. This study will provide preliminary data on whether the immune response of healthy adults to the nasal influenza vaccine can be boosted by LGG.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
History of any medical conditions for which the CDC states should not be vaccinated with LAIV (asthma, reactive airways disease, other chronic disorders of the pulmonary or cardiovascular systems; metabolic diseases such as diabetes, renal dysfunction, and hemoglobinopathies; or persons with known or suspected immunodeficiency diseases)
Self-reported vaccination with the influenza vaccine for the current influenza season (2007-8); vaccination with any vaccine within the one month period prior to study enrollment or intent to receive any other vaccine during the study period; hypersensitivity to any influenza vaccine components including thimersol or egg or Guillain-Barre syndrome
Self-reported treatment with immunomodulator/immunosuppressor drugs (interleukins, corticosteriods (oral or inhaled)), G(M)-CSF in 4 weeks before enrollment or self-reported history of IL-2 administration within 5 years; use of theophylline preparations or warfarin because of the theoretical possibilities of enhanced drug effects and toxicities following influenza vaccination; medication use that might affect the immune response to a vaccine or effects of LGG (no antibiotics during the previous 4 weeks)
Current alcohol, substance abuse, or systemic/psychiatric illness that potentially could interfere with compliance and ability to make study visits
Health care or day care workers or close contacts with immunosuppressed persons because of the theoretical risk that LAIV could be transmitted to the immunosuppressed person and cause disease, per CDC recommendations
Use of LGG or other probiotics in 4 weeks before enrollment. Yogurt consumption is not an exclusion criteria, but subjects will be asked to avoid consumption of other lactobacilli and probiotic organisms during the study period
Abnormalities upon physical examination
Acute febrile illness on day of intended immunization - immunization deferred until illness resolved
Routine laboratory tests outside the limits outlined for this study:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
52 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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