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The goals of this study are to better understand the human immune response to influenza vaccines, specifically the live attenuated (weakened) influenza vaccine given as a nasal spray. Better understanding why this vaccine does not work as well in adults as it does in children may help design better influenza vaccines.
Full description
Influenza (flu) viruses cause significant disease and death every year. Influenza vaccines protect against illness but their effectiveness can be limited. The influenza virus is notorious for its continuous mutation and potential to cause pandemics. This essentially creates a moving target for vaccine development, posing a significant challenge for global health. Current vaccines offer a certain degree of protection but are not fully effective due to the virus's ever-changing nature. In response to this, a live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) was developed with the objective of providing a higher degree of protection. This type of vaccine has demonstrated remarkable effectiveness in children, surpassing the protection provided by inactivated flu vaccines. This made LAIV a preferred choice for administration to young children.
However, when it comes to adults (individuals over 18 years of age), the scenario is markedly different. Recent studies have indicated a significant decline in LAIV's effectiveness in adults compared to children. Various clinical trials have reported that LAIV exhibits approximately 85% efficacy in children under the age of 18, which dramatically decreases to around 40%-60% in adults (aged 18-49 years). This suggests that adults do not respond as well to LAIV as children do. In adults, the LAIV-induced immunity appears to be short-lived, often lasting for only one influenza season, while in children LAIV has shown to provide long-lasting protection even against mismatched strains. Understanding the factors behind this discrepancy is critical to improve the protective efficacy of influenza vaccines across all age brackets. Unraveling this mystery could open the doors to the development of a superior flu vaccine, one that offers robust protection across all age groups.
This study will enroll healthy adult (age 18-49) participants who have not received the influenza vaccine recently. Participants will be asked to come in for 3 visits over 1 month. Participants will receive the FDA-approved live attenuated influenza vaccine, given as a nasal spray. Study staff will collect baseline and follow-up biologic samples to compare how the immune system reacts. The biologic samples will be collected from the blood and nose to look at immune cells in these parts of the body.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
History of allergy or serious adverse reaction, including Guillain-Barré syndrome, to a vaccine or vaccine products
History of a medical condition resulting in impaired immunity such as active solid tumors, leukemia, lymphoma, chemotherapy or radiation therapy, autoimmune conditions, or splenic dysfunction. Persons with previous skin cancers or cured non-lymphatic tumors are not excluded from the study.
History of asthma, cochlear implant, or active cerebrospinal fluid leak
Use of immune modifying drugs including: systemic steroids for more than 1 week (such as prednisone > 20mg/day), chronic administration (more than 14 days total) of immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory drugs in the prior 3 months
History of HIV, Hepatitis B or Hepatitis C infection
Chronic clinically significant medical problems that could be considered active or unstable (i.e diagnosed within the past 3 months or requiring a change in medication within the past 3 months). This is including (but not limited to):
Body Mass Index (BMI) > 35
Pregnancy or breast feeding, or plans to become pregnant in the next month
History of influenza infection or vaccination within the current or previous influenza season
Receipt of blood products or immune globulin product within the prior 3 months
History of excessive alcohol consumption, drug use, psychiatric conditions, social conditions or occupational conditions that in the opinion of the investigator would preclude compliance with the trial
Receipt of any live vaccines 30 days before, or plans to receive any live vaccines 30 days after vaccination
Receipt of any inactivated vaccines 14 days before, or plans to receive any inactivated vaccines 14 days after vaccination
Receipt of any non-registered or other investigational product in 30 days before, or plans to receive any other investigational product 30 days after vaccination
Temporary Exclusion Criteria:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Daniel Graciaa, MD, MPH, MSc; Daniel Graciaa, MD, MPH, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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