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Clinical Trial Summary

Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a cluster of metabolic conditions associated with obesity that predispose individuals to coronary heart diseases and diabetes but obesity has been shown to increase the risks of other diseases like cancer and asthma. Studies have also shown that obesity increases the risk of severe influenza infection and associated death and reduces the efficacy of influenza vaccine in the obese population but yet, the molecular mechanisms have not been described. The investigators are thus hypothesizing that differences in the innate immune responses between individual with or without metabolic syndrome impact viral infection and vaccine outcome. The investigators will perform seasonal influenza vaccination in people with or without metabolic syndrome to determine if the late adaptive response assessed by antibodies titers is different between the two groups and correlates with the early immune response assessed by gene expression profile in whole blood cells. The project proposed by the investigators will contribute to a better understanding of the inflammatory phenotype associated with metabolic syndrome and establish for the first time if it affects the immune protection against infectious diseases and particularly against influenza virus infection. The results will be important to determine if the population affected by metabolic syndrome should receive anti-influenza treatment in priority in the context of a severe influenza epidemic.


Clinical Trial Description

The development of industrialization with increased food consumption and sedentarity has given rise to an obesity pandemic, which affects up to 30% of the population in countries like US, these populations being at greater risk for cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes. More than obesity per se, visceral obesity is associated with metabolic diseases that cluster together and clinically defined metabolic syndrome. MetS comprises individuals with at least three of the 5 of the following factors: abdominal obesity, high blood triglycerides, low HDL ("good cholesterol"), high blood pressure and elevated fasting glucose. Metabolic syndrome is associated with a low-grade inflammation characterized by an infiltration of immune cells particularly in the adipose tissue, the liver and the pancreas that is thought to be responsible for the induction of insulin resistance. It is thought that obesity predisposes to other diseases such as cancer, asthma but only little attention has been given to infectious diseases. Studies have shown that obesity increases the risk of severe influenza infection and associated death and reduces the efficacy of influenza vaccine in the obese population but yet, the molecular mechanisms have not been described. Immune dysfunctions associated with obesity are suspected to play a major role but obesity is often associated with respiratory disorders that could directly explain the increased susceptibility to influenza infection. Also, metabolically healthy obesity is less associated with inflammation. Therefore, the investigators would like to focus particularly on metabolic syndrome, and determine how it influences immune response to viruses.

The investigators are thus hypothesizing that differences in the innate immune responses between individual with or without metabolic syndrome impact viral infection and vaccine outcome. Recent studies involving complex biological analysis and computational modeling have shown that the ability of an individual to positively respond to influenza vaccine can be molecularly predicted by looking at markers in the blood cells. The investigators will perform seasonal influenza vaccination in people with or without metabolic syndrome to determine if the late adaptive response assessed by antibodies titers is different between the two groups and correlates with the early immune response assessed by gene expression profile in whole blood cells.

Healthy nutritional habits along with increased physical activities should be best at preventing the development of metabolic syndrome but socio-economical issues are slowing the implementation of these changes. Therefore, as metabolic syndrome is raising public health concerns, it is important to understand why the metabolic syndrome affects susceptibility to diseases. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02653495
Study type Interventional
Source Rockefeller University
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date January 2016
Completion date March 2017

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