18 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
This is a Phase II open-label study in approximately 240, and up to 400, healthy males and non-pregnant females, aged 6 months to 17 years. This study is designed to assess the safety, reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of two doses administered intramuscularly approximately 21 days apart of an unadjuvanted subvirion monovalent inactivated influenza H3N2v vaccine manufactured by sanofi pasteur. Subjects will be stratified by age (approximately 60-100 subjects 6-35 months old, approximately 60-100 subjects 3-8 years old and approximately 60-100 subjects 9-17 years old) to receive 2 doses of vaccine, administered intramuscularly as 15mcg HA/0.5mL dose, approximately 21 days apart. In addition, approximately 60-100 subjects 6-35 months old will receive 2 doses of vaccine, administered intramuscularly as 7.5mcg HA/0.5mL dose, approximately 21 days apart. The duration of the study for each subject will be approximately 7 months.
This is a Phase II open-label study in approximately 200, and up to 240, healthy males and non-pregnant females, aged 18 years and older. This study is designed to assess the safety, reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of an unadjuvanted subvirion monovalent inactivated influenza H3N2v vaccine manufactured by Sanofi Pasteur. Subjects will be stratified by age (approximately 100 (up to 120) subjects 18-64 years old and approximately 100 (up to 120) subjects \>/= 65 years old) to receive two doses of vaccine, delivered intramuscularly as 15mcg HA/0.5mL dose, 21 days apart. The duration of the study for each subject will be approximately 7 months.
This study will evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of the H3N2v MN 2010/AA ca live attenuated influenza vaccine (H3N2v LAIV) in healthy children and adults, 6 to 26 years old.
This is a Phase 1b, randomized, double-blind, dose-escalating, age de-escalating, placebo-controlled study of 200 children, ages 6 months to 17 years. This clinical trial is designed to assess the safety, tolerability/reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of one and two doses of Sing2016 M2SR H3N2 influenza vaccine (manufactured by FluGen) administered intranasally in seven cohorts of children. The study design includes pre-planned Safety Review Committee( SRC) reviews. The first two groups to be vaccinated will be Cohorts 1 and 2. Cohort 1 consists of 45 children 9-17 years old. Thirty of them will receive one dose of the vaccine at a dose of 10\^9 TCID50, and 15 will receive one dose of placebo. Cohort 2 comprises 45 children 2-8 years old. Thirty of them will receive one dose of the vaccine at a dose of 10\^8 TCID50 and 15 will receive one dose of placebo. Cohort 3 consists of 25 children 2-8 years old. 15 of them will receive one dose of vaccine at 10\^9 TCID50 and 10 will receive one dose of placebo. Once 25 participants in Cohort 3 have completed Day 8 of follow-up, similar to Cohorts 1 and 2, the SRC will review to ensure no halting rules are met and if no rules are met, and the SRC determines it is safe to proceed, simultaneous enrollment into Cohorts 4 and 5 can begin. If any halting rules are met or any concerns are raised by the SRC, an external SMC may meet to discuss the data for recommendations on either progression or clinical trial modification before progression to the next cohort. Cohort 4 consists of 25 children 2-8 years old; 15 of them will receive two doses of vaccine at 10\^9 TCID50 and 10 will receive two doses of placebo, with a 28-day interval between the first and second doses. Due to the limited availability of product, and funding to support additional years of enrollment into Cohorts 5, 6, and 7, the decision was made to stop enrollment after the final participant was enrolled into Cohort 4. The primary study objective is to assess the safety and tolerability of one and two administrations of the Sing2016 M2SR H3N2 influenza vaccine at 10\^8 or 10\^9 TCID50 delivered intranasally to healthy participants, 2 to 17 years of age.
Background: Influenza A H3N2 is a flu virus. Symptoms include fever, cough, and runny nose. It can also be more serious. Researchers want to know more about how influenza causes disease in people. They hope to develop new vaccines and treatments for flu infection. Objective: To find the smallest amount of Influenza A H3N2 virus that causes a mild to moderate flu infection in healthy people. Also, to study the body s immune response to this virus and how the infection develops. Eligibility: Healthy people ages 18 50 who are: Non-smokers or non-habitual smokers Willing to not smoke for at least 9 days Design: Participants will be screened under NIAID protocol #11-I-0183 Participants will stay at an isolation unit at the clinic for at least 9 days. They will remain in the isolation unit except for study-specific activities. The influenza virus will be sprayed into the nose. Participants will be monitored 24 hours a day. They will have tests, including: Medical history Physical exam Daily questionnaires about symptoms Blood and urine tests Nasal wash and swab: A small tube of salt water is placed in the nose to wash it. It then collects the fluid. Or the inside of the nose is rubbed with a swab. ECG: Measures the heart s electrical signals ECHO: Sound waves take pictures of the heart PFTs/Spirometry: They will blow into a machine that measures the air they blow. Participants will be discharged after they test negative for influenza A. Participants will return to the clinic for 4 follow-up visits over 8 weeks. They may complete questionnaires at home.
Influenza, or the flu, is an infectious respiratory disease that can range in severity from mild to severe to even death. This study aims to evaluate a treatment for people who are hospitalized with the flu. The study is looking to see if antibodies collected from people who have recovered from the seasonal flu or who have had the seasonal flu shot can be used safely as a study drug to treat hospitalized patients with severe flu infections. Also, this study will help to find the right dose for this study drug for treatment of severe flu in hospitalized patients. Overall, this study will evaluate if the hospitalized patients receiving standard of care along with the study drug get better more quickly than those treated with standard of care and placebo. The study drug that contains antibodies against the flu is called anti-influenza immunoglobulin intravenous (FLU-IGIV).
Evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of three dosage levels of swine influenza vaccine in children ages 3 to \<9 years, adolescents 9 to \<18 years, adults 18 to \<65 years and elderly 65 years and older.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the body's immune response at different time points to an FDA-approved seasonal influenza vaccine. By better understanding the way the immune system responds to the influenza vaccine, the investigators can design more effective vaccines against influenza.
An open-label, dose-ranging influenza challenge study in healthy adult volunteers to determine the optimal infection dose and safety of a recombinant H3N2 (A/Texas/ A/Texas/71/2017 (H3N2, clade 3C3a) influenza strain. The goal of this study is to find a challenge virus dose that is safe and can achieve a symptomatic influenza Attack Rate (AR) that will be sufficiently high for utilization in future vaccine or intervention studies. The optimal dose of the three considered is broadly defined as the minimum challenge virus dose that elicits the highest AR without meeting safety-stopping criteria. Additionally, viral recovery, clinical symptoms, and immune responses over the post-challenge period will be described by challenge dose group. This study will last for up to 1 year depending upon the number of challenge cohorts enrolled given the adaptive dose-escalation design. The populations are healthy males and non-pregnant, non-breastfeeding females aged = 18 and \< 46 years of age with a serum HAI antibody titer of \</=1:40 against influenza A/Texas/71/2017 (H3N2), clade 3C3a. The study will enroll and challenge up to 106 (plus 8 shams) healthy adult volunteers with the H3N2 (A/Texas/71/2017 (H3N2), clade 3C3a) influenza virus challenge strain. The primary objectives are: 1) To determine the optimal infectious dose of a recombinant influenza virus (A/Texas/71/2017 (H3N2), clade 3C3a) to be used as a clinical challenge strain in future vaccine efficacy or intervention studies as assessed by viral shedding and clinical symptoms. 2) To describe viral detection by quantitative and qualitative Reverse Transcription - Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) from study subjects at baseline and post-challenge. 3) To document clinical symptoms from self-reported surveys and standardized symptom scales at baseline and post-challenge.
This is a Phase 1b, randomized study in healthy younger (18-50 years) and older (51-70 years) adults to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of a prime-boost vaccination regimen with an investigational plasmid DNA vaccine directed towards the 2011/12 influenza vaccine strains as a prime followed 36 weeks later by the 2012/13 influenza trivalent inactivated vaccine (TIV) as the booster injection, as compared to placebo prime followed by the 2012/13 seasonal TIV. The hypothesis is that the DNA vaccine will be safe for human administration and that the DNA vaccine prime-TIV boost schedule will elicit a better immune response than the seasonal TIV alone.
This is a randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, placebo-controlled Phase 1b study evaluating the safety and immunogenicity of the investigational Cam2020 M2SR H3N2 influenza vaccine delivered IN alone or concomitantly with inactivated influenza vaccine (IIV) delivered IM to a healthy adult population age 65 to 85 years at time of enrollment.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 1b study to evaluate safety and immunogenicity of the investigational Sing2016 M2SR H3N2 influenza vaccine delivered intranasally to a healthy adult population age 50 to 85 years.
This is a Phase I double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study in 250 healthy adults, 18-49 years of age, inclusive, who are in good health and meet all eligibility criteria. The purpose of this dose escalation clinical study is to assess the safety, tolerability/reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of H3N2 M2SR investigational vaccines for prevention of influenza, when delivered at higher dosages or in two doses . Eligible subjects will be screened and randomized to receive two administrations 28 days apart of Sing2016 M2SR at three dose levels (low, medium, high), Bris10 M2SR at one dose level (low), or placebo in a 1:1:1:1:1 ratio. Study duration will be approximately 8 months with subject participation duration approximately 7 months. The primary study objective is to assess the safety and reactogenicity of a monovalent live single replication influenza H3N2 M2SR vaccine.
The purpose is of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of three dose levels of H3N2 M2SR influenza vaccine versus placebo delivered intranasally to healthy adult subjects.
The overall objective of the present study is to utilize the recombinant H3N2 (A/Texas/71/2017 (H3N2, clade 3C3a)) influenza virus for a controlled human infection model to study host responses to influenza virus with the aim of identifying volatile markers in exhaled breath and expression markers in saliva for early detection of infection after pathogen exposure. This study will aim to recruit up to 40 healthy volunteers between ages 18-45 who will receive a single dose of either intranasally administered placebo (sham inoculum) or the virus challenge strain at a concentration known to elicit a \~60-80% attack rate. The response to influenza challenge will be measured by clinical, laboratory, immunological, digital biomarker, on-breath volatile organic compound data and host RNA expression in both blood and saliva. The study will enroll and challenge up to 34 healthy adult volunteers with live virus plus approximately 6 sham-inoculated controls who will be prescreened for study inclusion to have serological antibody titers of ≤1:40 against the challenge strain. Each participant will complete up to 3 weeks of follow-up post confinement.
This is a Phase I double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study in 50 healthy adolescents and children, 9-17 years of age, inclusive, who are in good health and meet all eligibility criteria. This clinical trial is designed to assess the safety and immunogenicity of a prime-boost regimen of H3N2 M2SR intranasal influenza vaccine (manufactured by FluGen) followed by licensed inactivated Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine (QIV) boost administered intramuscularly Subjects will be enrolled in one of two groups in a 1:1 ratio. Arm 1 will receive one dose of M2SR intranasally on Day 1 and one dose of QIV on Day 92. Arm 2 will receive one dose of placebo (saline) intranasally on Day 1, and one dose of QIV on Day 92. Study duration will be approximately 28 months with patient participation duration approximately 13 months. The primary study objective is to assess the safety and reactogenicity of a monovalent live attenuated influenza H3N2 M2SR vaccine.
A total of 88 children between 2 and 9 years of age will be randomized to receive a two dose schedule of either licensed live attenuated trivalent seasonal influenza vaccine (LAIV) or licensed inactivated seasonal influenza vaccine (TIV)or TIV followed by LAIV or LAIV followed by TIV separated by 28 days. Children with a laboratory documented history of prior H1N1 infection will be excluded.
This is a single center, randomized, partially-blinded, Phase II, small, targeted, prospective study in approximately 30 healthy male and non-pregnant female subjects aged 18 to 49 years old, inclusive, designed to evaluate and compare the immunogenicity between an intramuscular monovalent inactivated influenza A/H7N9 virus vaccine given with and without AS03 adjuvant, and an intramuscular unadjuvanted monovalent inactivated influenza A/H3N2v virus vaccine. The primary objectives are (1) assessing the serum anti-HA hemagglutination-inhibition (HAI) response to influenza A/H7N9 antigen (with and without adjuvant) at Day 57 (approximately one month after the second study vaccination with A/H7N9 vaccine with or without AS03) and influenza A/H3N2v antigen at Day 29 (approximately one month after the study vaccination with A/H3N2v), and (2) identifying differentially expressed genes in human immune cells on Days 2, 4, and 29 (following the first study vaccination with A/H7N9 vaccine with or without AS03) and on Days 30, 32, and 36 (following the second study vaccination with A/H7N9 vaccine with or without AS03), compared to baseline assessments performed prior to each study vaccination (Days -7, 1, and 29).