Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The purpose of this study is to evaluate FluMist with and without Ampligen in healthy volunteers.
Full description
Influenza epidemics continue to represent a significant medical problem in the developed as well as the developing world. Even with existing vaccines, annual influenza epidemics typically results in 20-50 million cases, resulting in 30,000-40,000 deaths in the U.S. alone. A possible pandemic could have even more devastating consequences. Current vaccines have a number of disadvantages including slow and expensive manufacturing, and a relative lack of efficacy in elderly, children and immune-compromised populations. These disadvantages would be multiplied during a pandemic. Use of Ampligen® as an adjuvant combined with FluMist® has a number of potential advantages as compared to traditional inactivated vaccines: it is simpler to administer (intranasally), generation of a broader immunity at the natural site of entry of the influenza virus as well as systemic immunity (and hence should be more efficacious than traditional vaccines) and may stimulate cross-protection against pre-pandemic H5N1 and/or H7N9 avian influenza strains. As FluMist®, due to its intranasal administration, imitates the natural entry of the influenza virus, it will generate local 'first-line' immunity as well as the traditional systemic immunity; therefore, at least theoretically provide greater protection than injectable vaccines.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Males and females in good general health, 19 to 49 years of age.
Subjects must provide written informed consent.
Subjects must be willing to participate through study completion.
Have not been vaccinated for influenza virus in the current season or had a known influenza virus infection in the current season
Subjects must be willing to undergo nasal washes and provide parotid saliva, urine and blood samples per protocol for safety and immunogenicity analyses.
Females of childbearing potential must have a negative urine pregnancy test.
A female volunteer must:
Agree to consistently use effective contraception from at least 21 days prior to enrollment through the Day 84 clinic visit for sexual activity that could lead to pregnancy;
Effective contraception is defined as using any of the following methods:
Or not be of reproductive potential, such as having reached menopause (no menses for 1 year) or having undergone hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, or tubal ligation;
Or be sexually abstinent;
Volunteers who were born female must also agree not to seek pregnancy through alternative methods, such as artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization, until after the Day 84 clinical visit.
Screening Laboratory Inclusion Criteria. Screening values must be within Institutional Normal Range, unless they are not clinically significant (i.e. values do not reach the threshold for mild (Grade 1) or higher toxicity as defined in Appendix D). Repeat laboratory testing may be performed at the discretion of the clinical investigators for spurious results on a case by case basis.
Subjects must weigh at least 120 pounds at screening
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
55 participants in 6 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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