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About
Background:
Dengue is a disease caused by a virus transmitted by mosquitoes in tropical and subtropical regions. Dengue is a leading cause of hospital stays and death in parts of Asia and Latin America, and outbreaks have occurred in the US. Currently, only one vaccine is licensed for dengue, but it only protects people who have had dengue before. In people who have never had dengue, that vaccine increases the risk of severe disease. Better vaccines are needed.
Objectives:
To test a potential new vaccine against dengue. To see if side effects and immune responses are different depending on a person s previous exposure to dengue.
Eligibility: Healthy people aged 18 to 59 years.
Design:
Participants will visit the clinic 11 times in 7 months; 9 of those visits will be in the first 2 months. Two additional visits are optional.
Participants will be screened. They will have a physical exam with urine and blood tests. They will complete a survey about their travel history.
Participants may opt to have a lymph node aspiration before receiving the study vaccine. An area in the left armpit will be numbed. A needle will be inserted to remove some cells from a lymph node.
The vaccine will be injected into the fat under the skin of the participant s upper left arm.
Participants will return for a provider visit and blood draws every 3 days for about the first 2 weeks. Then they will return for a provider visit and blood draws after longer intervals up to 7 months. The lymph node aspiration may be repeated at later visits.
Participants may opt to return for a last visit after 12 months.
Full description
Study Description:
Phase 1 trial wherein healthy adults with no (naive), one (primary heterotypic), or more than one (polytypic) previous natural dengue virus (DENV) infection(s) will be immunized with the DENV3 monovalent vaccine rDEN3delta30/31-7164. We aim to examine how pre-vaccine host immunity influences the safety and immunogenicity of monovalent DENV3 vaccination in a non-endemic population. We hypothesize that the vaccine will be safe and well tolerated, and all groups will have evidence of infection with the vaccine strain as indicated by a significant increase in the DENV neutralizing antibody geometric mean titer (GMT) between days 0 and 28. However, due to the immunity conferred by prior dengue exposure(s), the polytypic group will have the lowest and the heterotypic group will have the highest mean peak viremia, indicating protection and enhancement, respectively. Additionally, the polytypic group will have the strongest CD8+ T-cell responses at day 15 and will only have a transient rise in GMT with no difference in GMT between days 0 and 57. In contrast, the change in GMT will persist at day 57 in the heterotypic and naive groups. Finally, we expect that prior immunity will influence the vaccine response as evidenced by a significant association between the day 0 GMT and GMT at days 28 and 57.
Primary Objective:
Evaluate the safety of monovalent DENV3 vaccination in those with distinct natural DENV infection histories living in non-endemic areas, and how prior DENV immunity influences protection against vaccine strain infection evaluated by the change in GMT and mean peak viremia.
Secondary Objective:
Further evaluate how DENV infection history impacts the immunogenicity of the vaccine.
Primary Endpoints:
Secondary Endpoints:
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
To be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all the following criteria:
Aged 18 to 59 years.
In good general health as evidenced by medical history, physical examination, and laboratory screening results.
Willing to allow storage of samples and data for future research.
Willing to forgo receipt of any vaccine in the 28 days preceding the vaccine or in the 28 days following the dose of vaccine. For participants opting for LN FNA on day 57, they must be willing to forgo any vaccine through final LN FNA.
For individuals who can become pregnant: use of at least one method of highly effective contraception from the invitation to participate in the trial through day 60 after vaccination.
Able to provide informed consent.
Willing to adhere to lifestyle considerations for the duration of the study.
Willing to avoid travel to a dengue-endemic area as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from 1 month before vaccination through day 57
Baseline absolute neutrophil count (ANC) > 750 cells/microL.
Baseline creatinine < 1.5 mg/dL.
Baseline ALT < 1.25 (SqrRoot) upper limit of normal.
Serologic evidence of previous dengue virus infection indicative of either one previous DENV1, 2, or 4 infection or infection with at least two different serotypes.
--For the flavivirus-na(SqrRoot) ve group, they must have no history of flavivirus vaccination, medical illness concerning for a flavivirus infection, or travel history that increases the likelihood of other flavivirus infections. If there is uncertainty about a previous flavivirus exposure, then confirmatory antibody testing against the virus of interest must be negative.
Agree to avoid participation in other clinical studies requiring investigational interventions for the duration of this study (180 days).
Agree to avoid blood and plasma donation outside this study through day 28.
Contraceptive requirements: Participants who can get pregnant must agree to use highly effective contraception as outlined below from the invitation to participate in the study (approximately 2 weeks after screening) through day 60. Day 0 will be scheduled at least 28 days after the initiation of effective contraception. Participants who can get pregnant must have a negative pregnancy test on day 0 before receiving rDEN3DELTA30/31-7164. If a participant becomes pregnant or suspects they are pregnant by day 60, then they should inform the study staff and their primary care physician immediately. Acceptable forms of contraception are:
Pregnancy after day 60 will not be exclusionary as this will not impact our primary or secondary endpoints. Although we may observe pregnancy-associated differences in the transcriptome, these endpoints are exploratory and we have chosen to prioritize safety and inclusivity for people who can become pregnant. Study blood draw volumes after day 28 are less than the recommended volumes for research blood in critically ill patients. Pregnant participants will be excluded from LN FNA due to the potential risks of anesthetics that may be used. Pregnancy testing will be performed on each LN FNA day, with a negative result required to proceed to aspiration.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:
Pregnant at screening.
History of or positive test result for HIV, hepatitis B, or hepatitis C.
History of previous dengue vaccine.
Has any of the following:
Any medical, psychiatric, or social condition that, in the judgement of the investigator, is a contraindication to protocol participation.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
127 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Camila D Odio, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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