Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
A new influenza vaccine, known as LAIV (Live Attenuated Intranasal Vaccine) has recently been approved by a number of licensing boards and is given by a spray into the nose. In the United Kingdom (UK), the vaccine has been demonstrated to be highly effective against influenza infection. Further, despite concerns that LAIV can cause wheezing in children under age 2 years, the previous SNIFFLE studies have demonstrated it to be safe in children over 2 years with mild-moderate asthma.
The objective of this multicentre study is to further assess the safety of intranasal LAIV in children with asthma and recurrent wheeze, including those with severe symptoms.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Admission to Paediatric Intensive Care for invasive ventilation due to a respiratory illness in the preceding 2 years.
Contraindications to LAIV (notwithstanding allergy to egg protein), which include:
Hypersensitivity to the active ingredients, gelatin or gentamicin (a possible trace residue)
Previous systemic allergic reaction to LAIV
Previous allergic reaction to an influenza vaccine (not LAIV) is a relative contra-indication, which must be discussed with the site PI to confirm patient suitability
Children/adolescents who are clinically immunodeficient due to conditions or immunosuppressive therapy such as: acute and chronic leukaemias; lymphoma; symptomatic HIV infection; cellular immune deficiencies; and high-dose corticosteroids**.
**High-dose steroids is defined as a treatment course for at least one month, equivalent to a dose greater than 20mg prednisolone per day (any age), or for children under 20kg, a dose greater than 1mg/kg/day.
NB: LAIV is not contraindicated for use in individuals with asymptomatic HIV infection; or individuals who are receiving topical/inhaled/low-dose oral systemic corticosteroids or those receiving corticosteroids as replacement therapy, e.g. for adrenal insufficiency.
Children and adolescents younger than 18 years of age receiving salicylate therapy because of the association of Reye's syndrome with salicylates and wild-type influenza infection.
pregnancy
Contraindications to vaccination on that occasion, e.g. due to child being acutely unwell:
Febrile ≥38.0 degrees C in last 72 hours
*Acute wheeze in last 72 hours requiring treatment beyond that normally prescribed for regular use by the child's treating healthcare professional
*Recent admission to hospital in last 2 weeks for acute asthma
*Current oral steroid for asthma exacerbation or course completed within last 2 weeks
Any other significant condition or circumstance which, in the opinion of the investigator, may either put the participant at risk because of participation in the study, or may influence the result of the study, or the participant's ability to participate in the study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
479 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal