Federal Budgetary Research Institution State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology "Vector"
Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The aim of the clinical study is to study the safety and tolerability of the live cell-based vaccine against smallpox and other orthopoxvirus infections (VAC∆6 vaccine) based on vaccinia virus, in intracutaneous administration.
The research tasks are to:
Full description
This study is an open-label, controlled, parallel-group clinical trial. The study included 60 healthy volunteers of both sexes aged 18-40 years who had not been vaccinated against smallpox, had no vaccine marks and anti-smallpox virus neutralizing antibodies in their sera as well as those who met the inclusion criteria and did not have any exclusion criteria.
Distribution of volunteers by groups:
Group 1: 15 volunteers vaccinated once intradermally at a dose of 10⁶ plaque-forming units (PFU) (0.2 ml) of the VAC∆6 vaccine in the outer surface of the shoulder 8-10 cm below the shoulder joint; Group 2: 15 volunteers vaccinated once intradermally at a dose of 10⁷ PFU (0.2 ml) of the VAC∆6 vaccine in the outer surface of the shoulder 8-10 cm below the shoulder joint; Group 3: 15 volunteers vaccinated twice spaced 28 days apart, intradermally at a dose of 10⁶ PFU (0.2 ml) of the VAC∆6 vaccine in the outer surface of the shoulder 8-10 cm below the shoulder joint; Group 4: 15 volunteers vaccinated by the two-step vaccination method: Step 1 - the first vaccination once subcutaneously with 1 dose (0.5 ml) of the inactivated smallpox vaccine OspaVir® in the area of the left shoulder 8-10 cm below the shoulder joint; Step 2 - the second vaccination once by the method of multiple puncture into the outer surface of the shoulder 8-10 cm below the shoulder joint with a live smallpox vaccine at a dose of 1x 10⁶ PFU 7 days following the first vaccination with OspaVir®.
Since the product "Live cell-based vaccine against smallpox and other orthopoxvirus infections (VAC∆6 vaccine) based on vaccinia virus" was used for the first time for human vaccination, the vaccination of volunteers was started at a low dose, i.e. 1x10⁶ PFU.
The first five volunteers included in Group 1 were vaccinated intradermally at a dose of 1x10⁶ PFU. The volunteers were monitored daily; 14 days after vaccination, in the absence of side effects and after the results were agreed upon, vaccination was performed for the remaining 10 Group 1 volunteers and the first 5 volunteers of Group 2 who were vaccinated at a dose of 1x10⁷ PFU. After 14 days, in the absence of adverse effects (AEs) or serious adverse effects (SAEs), the rest of the volunteers included in Group 2 were vaccinated.
After receiving the results indicating the absence of AEs or SAEs in the volunteers vaccinated once with the VAC∆6 vaccine at a dose of 1x10⁶ PFU, the first vaccination of Group 3 volunteers was performed, the dose of the vaccine was 1x10⁶ PFU, and after 28 days - the second vaccination was performed.
Group 4 was vaccinated with reference products: live smallpox vaccine (smallpox vaccine) and the OspaVir® vaccine, an inactivated smallpox vaccine.
Vaccination was performed in two steps:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Consent to participate in the study after written informing.
Healthy volunteers (men and women) aged 18 to 40:
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal