Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Validation of Low-dose ETEC Challenge Model in U.S. Adults and Re-challenge of Immune Subjects With a Homologous ETEC Strain (H10407)
This study will validate a model for testing new vaccines designed to protect against
intestinal infections with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC). ETEC is one of the most
common causes of diarrhea in developing countries and is a common cause of travelers
diarrhea. Vaccines are now being developed and their development will be facilitated if we
have a valid model for testing these vaccines in human volunteers. We anticipate that the
new vaccines will be given to volunteers and they will then be given a dose of virulent ETEC
bacteria. If the vaccine is effective, the volunteers should not development diarrhea, but
if the vaccine is not effective, the volunteers will have diarrhea for a few days.
During this study, we will validate a minimum dose of virulent ETEC bacteria which is
sufficient to cause diarrhea in healthy adult volunteers and to identify conditions that can
make this model reliable.
We will also determine, in a follow-up group of volunteers, if being exposed to the ETEC
bacteria previously will protect against a subsequent illness when they are exposed to the
same bacteria a second time. We believe that the previously exposed group will be protected
and we will study the immune response to these exposures to help design vaccines that can
accomplish this kind of protection.
This is a study in which healthy adult inpatient volunteers will be challenged with
Escherichia coli, strain H10407 using different conditions. The study has the following
objectives.
1. To identify a revised set of procedures for the ETEC H10407 challenge model that will
allow for an inoculum dose <108 organisms, and that will cause diarrhea in 50% or more
of subjects without causing high output diarrhea, as determined by stool output volumes
or signs and symptoms associated with hypovolemia.
2. To measure mucosal and systemic immune responses to ETEC H10407 in naïve and immune
subjects.
3. To determine the extent to which recent enteric illness due to ETEC H10407will protect
subjects against diarrhea when re-challenged with H10407.
4. To determine the extent to which mucosal and/or systemic antibody responses following
ETEC H10407diarrhea are predictive of protection in a re-challenge study.
The study is divided into 4 cohorts. The first cohort will test four conditions of dose and
buffer for the challenge. Using the conditions that appear to be best, a larger number of
volunteers will be given this challenge to validate these conditions. The third group will
be divided between some volunteers who had been ill during previous studies and some who
have not been exposed before.
Specimens will be obtained to determine the extent of excretion of the challenge strain and
the immune responses to the challenge. These will include measures of both systemic and
local intestinal immunity.
Update as of May 2010:
The clinical portion of the study has been completed and is no longer recruiting. The
overall results were presented at two meetings including the Vaccines for Enteric Diseases
in Spain in 2009 and the US-Japan Medical Science conference on Cholera and Enteric Disease
in San Diego in 2009. Volunteers who received the lower dose (7 logs), along with an
overnight fast developed diarrhea with an attack rate of >75%. Volunteers who were
challenged a second time with this dose were protected from subsequent illness.
Immunological assessment of the volunteers is continuing.
Update as of November 2011 Results of the first three cohorts were published in 2011 (see
citation below). A fourth cohort is planned to be enrolled to evaluate the virulence of an
even lower dose of 5 and 6 logs of E coli. The same procedures will be carried out as with
earlier cohorts.
Update as of April 2013 Following challenge with 5 or 6 logs of strain H10407, the attack
rates were lower (approximately 30%). Among those volunteers who did develop illness, the
severity was the same as with higher doses. completion of these lower doses completes the
dose response curve for H10407. For future challenge studies, 7 logs of H10407 with
bicarbonate buffer will be used.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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