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About
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of illness in infants and children around the world. This study will evaluate the safety and immune response to an RSV vaccine in RSV-seronegative infants and children.
This study is a companion study to CIR 291.
Full description
RSV is the most common viral cause of serious acute lower respiratory illness (LRI) in infants and children under 5 years of age in the world. RSV illness can range from mild upper respiratory tract illness (URI) to severe LRI, including bronchiolitis and pneumonia. Severe RSV disease in infancy may also predispose children to develop reactive airway disease during childhood. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of an RSV vaccine (RSV LID ΔM2-2) in RSV-seronegative infants and children at least 6 months and through 24 months of age.
To determine study eligibility, the screening process will include a blood collection. Screening may begin after the RSV season (i.e., as of April 1) and enrollment must precede the RSV season (no later than October 14). At study entry, eligible participants will be randomly assigned to receive one dose of either the RSV vaccine or placebo, which will be delivered as nose drops. Participants will also undergo a review of medical history, clinical assessment, and a nasal wash. They will then receive their assigned vaccine and will remain under observation for monitoring for 30 minutes after receiving the vaccine. Additional study visits will occur at Days 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 28, and 56. These visits will include clinical assessments and nasal washes; on Day 56, a blood collection will also occur. On days where no study visit is scheduled (through Day 29), participants' parents or guardians will report participants' temperatures and signs of illness to researchers by e-mail or phone.
In October following vaccination, participants may have a pre-RSV season blood collection visit. During RSV season, November through March following vaccination, researchers will contact participants' parents or guardians on a weekly basis for follow-up monitoring. During this time frame, participants seen by a medical provider for fever, respiratory illness, or otitis media will have a study visit, which will include a nasal wash and clinical assessment. In April following vaccination, participants will undergo a final blood collection.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Participant is at least 6 months (defined as at least 180 days) of age at the time of screening and less than 25 months (defined as less than 750 days) of age
Participant is in good health based on review of the medical record, history, and physical examination, without evidence of chronic disease. Note: any questions regarding interpretation of this criterion should be forwarded to the team.
Parents/guardians demonstrate their understanding of the study, sign the informed consent, and agree to administration of study product following a detailed explanation of the study
Seronegative for RSV antibody, defined as a serum RSV-neutralizing antibody titer less than 1:40 at screening obtained no more than 42 days prior to scheduled inoculation
Has a current height and weight above the 5th percentile for age
Participant has received routine immunizations appropriate for age. Prior vaccines were administered at least:
Participant is expected to be available for the duration of the study
If born to an HIV-infected woman, participant must be non-breastfeeding with documentation of two negative HIV nucleic acid (RNA or DNA) tests with both collected when at least 1 month of age and at least one collected when at least 4 months of age, and no positive HIV nucleic acid (RNA or DNA) test; or two negative HIV antibody tests, both collected at less than or equal to 6 months of age
Exclusion criteria
Known or suspected HIV infection or impairment of immunological functions
Receipt of immunosuppressive therapy, including any systemic corticosteroids within 30 days of enrollment. Note: Cutaneous (topical) steroid treatment is not an exclusion.
Bone marrow/solid organ transplant recipient
Major congenital malformations (such as congenital cleft palate) or cytogenetic abnormalities
Previous receipt of a licensed or investigational RSV vaccine (or placebo) or previous receipt of or planned administration of any anti-RSV product (such as ribavirin or RSV IG)
Previous vaccine-associated anaphylactic or other severe adverse vaccine reaction
Known hypersensitivity to any study product component
Heart disease. Note: Participants with cardiac abnormalities documented to be clinically insignificant and requiring no treatment may be enrolled.
Lung disease, including any history of wheezing or reactive airway disease
Member of a household that contains, or will contain, an infant who is less than 6 months of age at the enrollment date through Day 28
Member of a household that contains another child who is, or is scheduled to be, enrolled in IMPAACT 2000, and there has been or will be an overlap in residency during that other child's participation in the study's Acute Phase (Days 0 to 28)
Member of a household that contains an immunocompromised individual, including, but not limited to:
Attends a daycare facility and shares a room with infants less than 6 months of age, and parent/guardian is unable or unwilling to suspend daycare for 28 days following inoculation.
Any of the following events at the time of enrollment:
Receipt of the following prior to enrollment:
Scheduled administration of the following after planned inoculation:
Receipt of immunoglobulin, any antibody products, or any blood products
Receipt of any of the following medications within 3 days of study enrollment:
Receipt of salicylate (aspirin) or salicylate-containing products within the past month
Born at less than 37 weeks gestation and less than 1 year of age at the time of enrollment
Meets criteria for failure to thrive within the 6 months prior to enrollment: a decline in height or weight growth that has crossed two major growth percentiles (e.g., from above the 75th to below the 25th) in an interval of less than 6 months
Suspected or documented developmental disorder, delay, or other developmental problem
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
29 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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