Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background:
Malaria is a disease that affects many people in Africa. It is caused by germs carried by some mosquitoes. A person bitten by an infected mosquito will get malaria. Most malaria infections cause only mild symptoms or none at all, but sometimes the disease can be deadly. Malaria can also harm pregnant women. They may lose their pregnancies or deliver too early, and the mother and newborn may die. An experimental malaria vaccine (PfSPZ) has shown some protection against malaria infection. It is not yet known if PfSPZ is safe for pregnant women.
Objective:
To test the PfSPZ vaccine in pregnant women.
Eligibility:
Healthy women aged 18 to 34 years at 14 to 32 weeks gestation with 1 fetus.
Design:
The study will be in Mali. Participants will have about 40 clinic visits over 20 months.
They will be screened. They will have an ultrasound exam and a test of their heart function. They will have blood and urine tests.
Participants will receive an injection through a needle into a vein on 3 visits over 1 month. Some will receive the PfSPZ vaccine; others will be injected with salt water. They will not know which injection they are getting.
After the last injection, participants will visit the clinic every 2 weeks. They will have blood tests at each visit.
After giving birth, participants and their infants will visit the clinic every 2 weeks for 4 months; then they will have visits each month until the infant is 1 year old. The infant will be examined and will have blood tests at each visit.
Full description
Study Description:
A randomized double blind, placebo-controlled study to assess the safety, tolerability, immunogenicity and protective efficacy of a 1, 8, 29-day regimen of 9x105 PfSPZ of PfSPZ Vaccine or placebo (normal saline) in healthy pregnant women and their fetus/newborn. The first immunization is to be administered at 16 0/7 to 32 6/7 weeks of gestation and targeted to be completed prior to delivery. Offspring and post-partum women will be followed for 12 months post-delivery.
The study is composed of two cohorts (3rd trimester: Arms 1A, 2A, 2nd trimester: Arms 1B, 2B) with two arms (PfSPZ Vaccine, normal saline placebo) and associated offspring. Enrollment and vaccinations will be staggered for safety with only third trimester women (n=30; based on guidance provided by regulatory bodies) enrolling first in two separate subsets (n=10 [5 PfSPZ Vaccine/5 normal saline], n=20 [10 PfSPZ Vaccine/10 normal saline]) and receiving all three doses of vaccine in a staggered manner and undergoing safety reviews prior to further enrollments. Third trimester enrollment in this staggered manner is to account for any significant events occurring immediately post initial vaccinations with the smaller first subset of women (n=10; DSMB review). After all third trimester pregnancy outcomes are reviewed (by DSMB, FDA, Sponsor, EC/IRB), an additional cohort of women in their second trimester will be vaccinated in two separate subsets (n=10 [5 PfSPZ Vaccine/5 normal saline], n=20 [10 PfSPZ Vaccine/10 normal saline]) separated by at least six weeks. A longer time period of review will be conducted during the 2nd trimester out of additional safety measures to ensure no significant events of concern occur post receipt of a full vaccination series (n=10; DSMB review) before proceeding to the last subset of women (n=20).
Arm 1 (9x10^5 PfSPZ Vaccine): (n = 30) pregnant women will receive three doses of PfSPZ Vaccine (9x10^5 PfSPZ) via direct venous inoculation (DVI) at 1, 8, 29 days
Arm 2 (normal saline): (n = 30) pregnant women will receive normal saline via DVI at 1, 8, 29 days
All participants will receive intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) as per standard of care in Mali. The study team will coordinate with the women s antenatal care (ANC) provider to time her IPTp prior to vaccine dose 1 (approximately 2 weeks prior) and between vaccine dose 2 and dose 3 (approximately 2 weeks prior to dose 3) within the protocol defined windows.
Pregnant women will be monitored closely for the duration of their pregnancy and for at least 12 months post-partum for safety, tolerability, immunogenicity, and malaria infection during the follow-up period.
Infants (n=up to 60) born to enrolled women will also be monitored closely for 12 months post-delivery for safety, immunogenicity, and malaria infection.
Objectives:
Primary Objectives:
-To describe the safety of PfSPZ Vaccine at 9x10^5 PfSPZ at dosing schedule of 1, 8, 29 days in pregnant women and their fetuses using a composite measure of adverse maternal and birth outcomes
Secondary Objectives:
Exploratory Objectives:
Endpoints:
Primary Endpoints:
-Composite endpoint of adverse maternal or birth outcomes defined as: preterm birth, miscarriage, stillbirth, early neonatal death, direct maternal death, low birth weight, small for gestational age (counts and proportions)
Secondary Endpoints:
Safety and tolerability in pregnant women and their fetuses
Safety in infants
Exploratory Endpoints:
Protective efficacy
Immune responses (antibody, cellular) to PfSPZ Vaccine in pregnant and post-partum women and infants and their association with protection against Pf malaria
Genotyping of maternal peripheral blood or placental and newborn/infant peripheral or cord blood Pf parasites
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
In order to be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following
criteria:
Willing and able to provide consent for study participation for herself and for her infant prior to initiation of any study procedures
Stated willingness to comply with all study procedures and availability of both mother and offspring for the duration of the study
Healthy, pregnant women 18-34 years of age (inclusive)
Singleton pregnancy (confirmed by ultrasound)
Gestational weeks of pregnancy, confirmed by best obstetrical estimate, at minimum of 16 weeks 0 days and a maximum of 32 weeks 6 days of gestation at the time of the first dose of PfSPZ Vaccine and minimum 14 weeks 0 days and maximum of 32 week 0 days of gestation at the time of the first dose of IPTp
--Note: women may be screened prior to 16 0/7 weeks gestation for dating of pregnancy
Documented first, second, or third trimester ultrasound with singleton gestation and no significant fetal anomalies or other abnormalities
Able to provide proof of identity to the satisfaction of the study clinician completing the enrollment process
Identified antenatal care provider outside of the study team
In good general health as evidenced by medical history
Willing to have blood samples stored for future research
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this
study:
Medical, behavioral, cognitive, or psychiatric disease that in the opinion of the investigator affects the ability of the participant to understand and comply with the study protocol
Hemoglobin (Hgb), WBC, absolute neutrophils, and platelets outside the local laboratory defined limits of normal per trimester and >= Grade 2 (participants may be included at the investigator s discretion for not clinically significant abnormal values)
Alanine transaminase (ALT) or creatinine (Cr) level above the local laboratory-defined (per trimester) upper limit of normal and >= Grade 2 (participants may be included at the investigator s discretion for not clinically significant abnormal values)
Infected with HIV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, syphilis, toxoplasmosis, rubella as documented by testing at screening
Sickle cell disease (HbSS or HbSC) or sickle trait (HbAS) by testing at screening
Clinically significant abnormal ECG such as abnormal QTc
History of receipt of the following:
Known medical problems:
rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, Sj(SqrRoot)(Delta)gren s syndrome, or autoimmune thrombocytopenia)
Severe asthma (defined as asthma that is unstable or required emergent care, urgent care, hospitalization, or intubation during the past two years, or that has required the use of oral or parenteral corticosteroids at any time during the past two years)
Immunodeficiency disorder
Asplenia or functional asplenia
Diabetes (inclusive of Type 1, 2, or gestational)
Deep venous thrombosis or thromboembolic event (current or prior history)
Seizures (exception is simple febrile seizures during childhood)
History of prior uterine surgery
2 or more spontaneous miscarriages
Any unexplained stillbirths
Any unexplained neonatal deaths
Infant with major congenital anomalies
Infant with known genetic disorder
Preterm deliveries (< 37 0/7 WGA)
Severe pre-eclampsia and/or eclampsia
Gestational hypertension
Gestational diabetes
Red blood cell isoimmunization
Cervical insufficiency or incompetent cervix
Polyhydramnios or oligohydramnios
Premature contractions or preterm labor
Bleeding through gestation
Known intrauterine fetal growth restriction
Use of anti-coagulants during pregnancy
Receipt of progesterone during current pregnancy
Prior Cesarean section
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
400 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal