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Clinical Trials/NCT02972957
NCT02972957
Completed
Phase 4

A Study of Intranasal Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine Immunogenicity and Associations With the Nasopharyngeal Microbiome Among Children in the Gambia - The NASIMMUNE Study

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine1 site in 1 country364 target enrollmentJanuary 30, 2017
ConditionsInfluenza

Overview

Phase
Phase 4
Intervention
Nasovac-S
Conditions
Influenza
Sponsor
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Enrollment
364
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
nasal IgA response
Status
Completed
Last Updated
6 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) is made up of weakened influenza viruses given into the nose and in early studies was shown to be better than the standard influenza vaccine at preventing infections in children. However, more recently, it has performed less well and it may also work less well in Sub-Saharan Africa. Not only do the investigators not know why this is, but the investigators also do not fully understand why LAIV produces stronger nasal antibody responses in some individuals but not others. Usually harmless bacteria that are present in participants noses can influence how our immune system works and variations in these may explain differences in how LAIV works. The project will recruit children given LAIV in the Gambia to gain further understanding of these issues.

The investigators will measure a variety of responses to LAIV, including genes that can change their expression early after vaccination and use advanced computational techniques to identify new relationships between these genes and other LAIV responses. The investigators will also see whether nasal bacterial profiles in children who respond to LAIV are different from those who do not. In addition, the investigators will alter these bacteria in a subset of children with antibiotics and see whether this affects both nasal gene expression and later responses to LAIV.

Detailed Description

Purpose The overall goal of this study is to conduct at detailed immunogenicity study of intranasal live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV; Nasovac-S, Serum Institute of India Pvt. Ltd.), including identification of early molecular signatures associated with a robust mucosal immune response. In addition, the study team will explore whether the nasopharyngeal microbiome influences this immune response and whether LAIV has an impact on the microbiome. A total of 365 healthy children aged 24 - 59 months will be recruited in The Gambia for this study. Background Both the burden of infection and use of influenza vaccines in children from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) have been neglected. There are limited immunogenicity or efficacy data from SSA of the widely used Ann Arbor strain-derived LAIV. This LAIV was shown to have greater relative efficacy compared to inactivated influenza vaccine in children in early randomized-controlled trials. There has, however, been concern regarding lower vaccine effectiveness in the US in recent years. The Serum Institute of India Pvt. Ltd. has recently developed a trivalent LAIV (Nasovac-S) via a WHO facilitated donation of a Russian-derived LAIV, with the intention of scaling up provision of LAIV to resource-limited settings. Based on initial safety and immunogenicity data, Nasovac-S was licensed in India and granted a WHO prequalification certificate in 2015. Two placebo-controlled efficacy studies using Nasovac-S were recently undertaken in Bangladesh and Senegal (in children aged 24 - 59 months and 24 - 71 months respectively), providing mixed and contrasting results. In Senegal, no efficacy was found against the circulating pandemic H1N1 influenza strain (-9.7%, 95% CI -62.6, 26.1). In Bangladesh the overall vaccine efficacy to vaccine-matched strains, in a study of identical design, was 57.5% (95% CI 43.6, 68.0), with efficacy against H1N1 and H3N2, 50.0% (95% CI 9.2, 72.5) and 60.4% (95% CI 44.8, 71.6) respectively. The reason for the discrepancy in these studies or the poorer performance of the H1N1 component is not clear and emphasizes the need to undertake detailed immunogenicity studies of this vaccine in SSA. On a wider note, the exact immunological mechanisms of action of LAIV are also under-explored. Study type: Interventional Design: All primary objectives will be addressed through the conduct of a phase 4, randomized, controlled clinical vaccine trial. A total of 330 healthy children aged 24 - 59 months will be enrolled into one of three groups of equal size (3 x 110 children): (i) LAIV-vaccinated (Group A - blood sample at day 0, 2, 21) (ii) LAIV-vaccinated (Group B - blood sample at day 0, 7, 21) (iii) Control group (Group C) The study is not blinded, but group allocation will be concealed from the investigator team and block randomization stratified by sex will be undertaken. Two LAIV-vaccinated groups are included in order to achieve several exploratory objectives, which require blood sampling at different times following vaccination, whilst minimizing the number of times children are bled. The unvaccinated subjects will serve as a control group for the primary objective of assessing the impact of LAIV on the nasopharyngeal microbiome. An additional 35 healthy children aged 24 - 59 months will be recruited in the 2nd phase of recruitment (approximately Jan - June 2018) to assess how modulation of the nasopharyngeal microbiome with antibiotics impacts the mucosal immunogenicity to LAIV. These subjects will be matched as closely as possible by pre-antibiotic nasopharyngeal microbiome profile, age and sex (in that order of preference), in an exploratory nested case-control study, to n = 35 children recruited in the main clinical trial. Official title A Study of Intranasal Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine Immunogenicity and Associations with the Nasopharyngeal Microbiome Among Children in the Gambia (The NASIMMUNE study) Primary outcome measures * To identify novel early systemic and mucosal molecular signatures following LAIV that are associated with subsequent robust nasal and oral influenza-specific immunoglobulin A (IgA) responses, in order to provide insight into the mechanisms of successful mucosal immunization * To identify associations between nasopharyngeal microbiota and nasal and oral influenza-specific IgA responses post-LAIV in Gambian children, to explore whether microbiome variability can explain suboptimal immune responses in some individuals to live intranasal mucosal vaccines in Sub-Saharan Africa * To establish whether LAIV impacts the nasopharyngeal microbiome, with a specific focus on the burden of S. pneumoniae

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
January 30, 2017
End Date
May 23, 2019
Last Updated
6 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • • Healthy male or female child at least 24 months of age and less than 60 months of age at the time of study entry.
  • Resident in the study area and with no plans to travel outside the study area during the period of subject participation.
  • Informed consent for the study participation obtained from a parent (or guardian only if neither parent is alive or if guardianship has been legally transferred (see section 11.2).
  • Willingness and capacity to comply with the study protocol as judged by a member of the clinical trial team.

Exclusion Criteria

  • • Serious, active, medical condition, including but not limited to:
  • chronic disease of any body system
  • severe protein-energy malnutrition (weight-for-height Z-score of less than -3)
  • known genetic disorders, such as Down's syndrome or other cytogenetic disorder
  • Active wheezing
  • History of documented hypersensitivity to eggs or other components of the vaccine (including gelatin, sorbitol, lactalbumin and chicken protein), or with life-threatening reactions to previous influenza vaccinations.
  • History of documented hypersensitivity to macrolide antibiotics
  • History of Guillain-Barré syndrome.
  • Receipt of aspirin therapy or aspirin-containing therapy within the two weeks before planned study vaccination.
  • Any suspected or confirmed congenital or acquired state of immune deficiency including but not limited to primary immunodeficiencies including thymus disorders, HIV/AIDS, hematological or lymphoid malignancies (blood tests will not be routinely undertaken with this regard as part of the study).

Arms & Interventions

LAIV-vaccinated group 1

Nasovac-S vaccination group A , blood samples days 0, 2, 21

Intervention: Nasovac-S

LAIV-vaccinated group 2

Nasovac-S vaccination group B, blood samples at days 0, 7, 21

Intervention: Nasovac-S

Oral Azithromycin & vaccination

group D - a single dose of oral Azithromycin will be given 28 days prior to Nasovac-S vaccination

Intervention: Nasovac-S

Oral Azithromycin & vaccination

group D - a single dose of oral Azithromycin will be given 28 days prior to Nasovac-S vaccination

Intervention: Azithromycin

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

nasal IgA response

Time Frame: 21 days post LAIV

Influenza specific nasal IgA responses

fold increase in oral fluid influenza-specific/total IgA ratio

Time Frame: day 0 - Day 21

fold increase in oral fluid influenza-specific/total IgG ratio

Time Frame: Day 0 - Day 21

Secondary Outcomes

  • gene expression changes in nasal and systemic samples(2 days after LAIV)
  • Changes in the relative abundance of different operational taxanomic units (OTUs) of nasopharyngeal microbiota(day 7 and day 21 compared to day 0 in each participant)
  • density of S. Pneumoniae(day 7 and day 21 after LAIV compared to day 0)

Study Sites (1)

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