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Clinical Trials/NCT01012557
NCT01012557
Completed
Not Applicable

H1N1v Vaccination of Pregnant Women: A Longitudinal Cohort Study Characterizing Influenza AH1N1v Vaccination in Pregnant Women

Copenhagen Studies on Asthma in Childhood2 sites in 1 country296 target enrollmentNovember 2009
ConditionsH1N1v Influenza

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
H1N1v Influenza
Sponsor
Copenhagen Studies on Asthma in Childhood
Enrollment
296
Locations
2
Primary Endpoint
Geometric mean HI titer (GMT) on Day 1, Day 22, and at all the other relevant time points to assess persistence.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
3 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Pregnant women are at particular risk during the imminent H1N1v influenza pandemic. The new H1N1v virus requires urgent political and medical decisions on vaccination strategies in order to minimize severe disease and death from this pandemic. However, there is a lack of evidence to build such decisions upon. A vaccine will be provided in the fourth quarter of 2009, but there is little knowledge on the immunogenicity. Particularly its clinical effectiveness and duration of immunity in pregnant women and their newborn infants is unknown. Therefore, it will be important to study the optimal vaccination regimens with respect to dosing and use of adjuvant to decide future health policies on vaccination of pregnant women. We have a unique possibility to study these aspects of H1N1v infection in pregnant women in our ongoing unselected, prospective, birth-cohort study recruiting 800 pregnant mothers between Q1- 2009 and Q4-2010. Pregnant women from East-Denmark are being enrolled during the 2nd trimester and their infant will undergo a close clinical follow-up. The H1N1v pandemic is expected to reach Denmark Q4-2009. The timing of this enrollment and the imminent pandemic allows for an "experiment of nature" whereby the first half of the mothers completes pregnancy before the H1N1v pandemic. The other half of this cohort will be pregnant while H1N1v is prevalent in the community and will require H1N1v vaccination. The aim of this randomized, controlled, trial is to compare and evaluate the dose-related immune protection conferred by vaccine and adjuvant (Novartis vaccine Focetria) in pregnant women and non-pregnant women. In addition the protocol will assess the passive immunity conferred to the newborn from these vaccine regimes. The study will provide evidence-based guidance for health policies on vaccination for the population of pregnant women during future H1N1v pandemics.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
November 2009
End Date
December 2011
Last Updated
3 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Female

Investigators

Sponsor
Copenhagen Studies on Asthma in Childhood
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Healthy pregnant and non pregnant women living in Eastern Denmark
  • Fluent in Danish

Exclusion Criteria

  • Heart disease, endocrine disease, tuberculosis and sarcoidosis.
  • History of any anaphylaxis, serious vaccine reactions, or hypersensitivity to influenza viral proteins, to any excipients, and to eggs (including ovalbumin), and chicken proteins.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Geometric mean HI titer (GMT) on Day 1, Day 22, and at all the other relevant time points to assess persistence.

Time Frame: Day 1, Day 22

Percentage of subjects achieving a seroconversion or a significant increase (defined as: HI ≥1:40 for subjects negative at baseline [<1:10]; a minimum 4-fold increase in HI titer for subjects positive at baseline [HI≥1:10])

Time Frame: Day 1, Day 22

Percentage of subjects with a HI titer ≥1:40 (i.e. seroprotection) on Day 1, Day 22, and at all the other relevant time points to assess persistence

Time Frame: Day 1, Day 22

Day 22/Day 1, and at all the other relevant time points to assess persistence/Day 1 geometric mean ratio (GMR) of HI

Time Frame: Day 1, Day 22

Secondary Outcomes

  • The outcomes of pregnancies will be categorized as normal, abnormal or therapeutic/elective termination(duration of pregnancy)
  • The safety of the study vaccines will be assessed based on number of subjects exposed to study vaccines with reported selected adverse events per vaccine group.(12 months)

Study Sites (2)

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