Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Ebola virus has infected and killed people, mostly in Africa. In 2014, the Zaire ebolavirus (ZEBOV) has affected several thousand people. There is no approved effective way to treat or prevent Ebola. Researchers are trying to develop a vaccine for it. This is a study of the anti-Ebola vaccine vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) ZEBOV (V920; BPSC-1001) to see if it is safe and to see how it affects people's immune system.
Full description
Between 1994 and the present, there have been many Ebola virus (EBOV) outbreaks affecting mostly central Africa. However, the 2014 West African outbreak significantly exceeds all previous outbreaks in geographic range, number of individuals affected and in disruption of typical activities of civil society.
This is a Phase 1 safety and tolerability study to evaluate a novel vaccine to Ebola using a live VSV replacing the gene encoding the G envelope glycoprotein with the gene encoding the envelope glycoprotein from the Zaire strain of Ebola (VSVΔG-ZEBOV also known as V920 and BPSC-1001).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Healthy male or females, ages 18 to 65 (inclusive) at the time of screening
Females of childbearing potential and all males, must be willing to use effective methods of contraception, from at least 14 days prior to vaccination through Day 56 which would include:
Must be willing to minimize blood and body fluid exposure of others for at least 7 days after vaccination, which includes:
Must be willing to forgo blood donation for one year
Must agree not to enroll in another study of an investigational agent prior to completion of Day 56 and not participate in an investigational vaccine study until the last required protocol visit on Day 365
Ability to provide informed consent
Exclusion criteria
FACTORS THAT INCREASE RISK TO THE SUBJECT:
Clinically significant medical condition, physical examination findings, clinically significant abnormal laboratory results, or past medical history with clinically significant implications for current health. A clinically significant condition or process includes but is not limited to:
Women who are breast-feeding
Positive urine or serum pregnancy test
Abnormal chemistry panel; defined as:
Abnormal complete blood count (CBC) defined as:
Abnormal urinalysis defined as:
Positive serology for hepatitis B surface antigen
Positive serology for hepatitis C
Positive serology for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
Known allergy to the components of the VSVΔG-ZEBOV vaccine (V920) vaccine product (VSV, albumin, tris)
History of severe local or systemic reactions to any vaccination or a history of severe allergic reactions
FACTORS THAT MAY LIMIT VSV REPLICATION OR MAKE INTERPRETATION OF IMMUNOGENICITY DIFFICULT:
FACTORS THAT WOULD INCREASE RISK TO OTHERS DUE TO VSV VIRAL SHEDDING:
FACTORS THAT COULD IMPAIR INTERPRETATION OR EXECUTION OF THE STUDY:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
39 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal