Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04695717
Other study ID # VX.2020.01
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date September 5, 2020
Est. completion date April 1, 2022

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source Vietnam Military Medical University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This was an extensive, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase 3 study that aimed to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of the seasonal inactivated, split virion, trivalent influenza vaccine (IVACFLU-S) in children from 6 months to under 18 years old and the elderly over 60 years old in Vietnam. The main target: Evaluating the safety of the single or double dose of seasonal influenza vaccine (IVACFLU-S) in Vietnamese children aged 6 months to 17 years and adults over 60 years old. Evaluating the immunogenicity of the seasonal inactivated, split virion, trivalent influenza vaccine (IVACFLU-S) after 1st injection on day 22 (+7) for groups ≥ 9 years old or day 49 (+7) for groups of 6 months to 8 years for each antigenic component of the vaccine.


Description:

The seasonal inactivated, split virion, trivalent influenza vaccine (TIV) were purified by the method of super centrifugation to create gradient segments in sucrose sugar produced by IVAC, or placebo produced by IVAC. Vaccines are produced on eggs, inactivated with formaldehyde. The dose of the vaccine tested was 15 mcg of HA for each antigen component in 0.5 ml. The influenza virus strains used to produce the 2020-2021 seasonal vaccine will also be provided by the NIBSC, which will be used according to WHO recommendations, which are expected to include the following Southern Hemisphere strains: Influenza A / H1N1 strain: Recombinant strain IVR-190 44250 E12 of the strain (A / Brisbane / 02/2018). Influenza strain A / H3N2: strain IVR-197 (H3N2) 44850 E14 recombinant strain (A / South Australia / 34/2019). Flu strain B (B / Washington / February 2019). Extensive phase 3 was conducted 2 sites: District Health Center (DHC) of Vu Thu, Thai Binh, Vietnam; and DHC of Binh Luc, Ha Nam. Subjects were from two age groups: 6 months-under 18 years and over 60 years. Both safety and immunogenicity were assessed


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 864
Est. completion date April 1, 2022
Est. primary completion date December 20, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 6 Months and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: *Groups from 6 months to under 18 years: - Must have a sponsor (Father / Mother / Legal relative) and get the consent of the sponsor by signing a consent form to participate in the study. (Groups from 6 months to 8 years old must have a direct sponsor, groups 9-17 years old must have an indirect sponsor). - The sponsor must be able to read and write and must commit to taking the child or asking the child to visit on schedule. - If the Sponsor is not the child's parent, he/she must get the consent of the child's father/mother in writing. - Healthy or previous acute illness but stabilized within 2 weeks before injection. - No chronic disease (cancer, heart failure, kidney, liver ...) or chronic disease that has stabilized 3 months before injection. - Children under 1 year old: Must have gestational age = 37 and = 42 weeks at birth and birth weight> 2500g and not have congenital disease. Children <60 months of age are not severely malnourished (not exceeding I) Children 6 months to 8 years old who have never received a seasonal flu vaccine (from birth). - Female adolescents who are likely to become pregnant need to be informed of possible risks to the fetus if participating in the study and if participating in the study, must comply with contraceptive measures during the period. research. *Group over 60 years old - Can read, write (self-report) and ready to sign the consent form to participate in research. - Ability to participate in scheduled visits and adhere to all procedures of testing. - Be healthy or have a stable medical condition through history exploitation and physical examination. For subjects who have medical problems or symptoms/signs, the medical problems or symptoms/signs must be consistently controlled or unchanged within the past 3 months. If you are using medication to treat that medical problem, the dose should be stable for at least 1 month before the product is injected. - For female subjects who are still fertile: Are not breastfeeding, or are not pregnant (based on a negative urine test) and are not planning to become pregnant until Day 22. For women who have not had sterilization surgery (hysterectomy or ligation fallopian tube) or menopause for less than a year must have a negative urine test and be ready to use effective contraception (intrauterine device, hormonal contraceptive, condom, vaginal diaphragm with spermicide) through visit Day 22 Exclusion Criteria: - Currently (within 2 weeks from the time of selection) with severe acute illness with or without fever. - Participation in another therapy-related clinical trial within the past 3 months or plan to participate in a similar clinical trial at the same time it is. Use any other vaccine for 4 weeks prior to joining or refusing to delay vaccination of such vaccines until after the visit on Day 22 (for groups = 9 years) or day 49 (with groups <9 years old). - Having been vaccinated against influenza in the past 11 months (only children 6 months to 8 years old who have been previously vaccinated with influenza vaccine (from birth) are also exclusion criteria). - Use immunoglobulins or other hematological products within 3 months prior to study enrollment or plan to use these products prior to day 22 visit (for groups = 9 years) or day 49 (with groups <9 years old). - Suspected or certain acquired immunodeficiency. - Long-term use (described as 14 consecutive days or more) immunosuppressants or other immunomodulatory therapies within 6 months prior to joining (for corticosteroids such as prednisone or substances similar to dose = 0.5 mg / kg / day; topical steroids are allowed). - Through historical exploitation or physical examination, there is an unstable disease, but according to the researcher's assessment, this may affect the implementation or the results of the study or increase the risk for the participants. researcher. - Have experienced a previous hypersensitivity reaction after using any vaccine. - Certain or suspected hypersensitivity reaction to any ingredient of the studied vaccine, including chicken protein or chicken eggs and rubber (from the rubber cap of the vaccine vial). - Bleeding disorders or anticoagulant use within 3 weeks prior to selection. Have active TB or have symptoms of active tuberculosis, whatever the cause (self-reported). - Are currently addicted to alcohol or using drugs that, according to researchers' assessment, could affect their ability to comply with research protocols. - History of Guillain-Barré syndrome. - Cancer or any malignant blood disease. - Children under 1 year old but at birth with gestational age = 36 and = 43 weeks at birth and birthweight = 2500g - Children <60 months old with severe malnutrition aged II and above

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Biological:
IVACFLU-S
The Seasonal Inactivated, Split Virion, Trivalent Influenza Vaccine (TIV) were purified by the method of super centrifugation to create gradient segments in sucrose sugar produced by IVAC, or placebo produced by IVAC. Vaccines are produced on eggs, inactivated with formaldehyde. The dose of the vaccine tested was 15 mcg of HA for each antigen component in 0.5 ml. The influenza virus strains used to produce the 2020-2021 seasonal vaccine will also be provided by the NIBSC, which will be used according to WHO's recommendation, which is expected to include the following Southern Hemisphere strains: Influenza A / H1N1 strain: Recombinant strain IVR-190 44250 E12 of the strain (A / Brisbane / 02/2018). Influenza strain A / H3N2: strain IVR-197 (H3N2) 44850 E14 recombinant strain (A / South Australia / 34/2019). Flu strain B (B / Washington / February 2019).

Locations

Country Name City State
Vietnam CDC Ha Nam Phu Ly Ha Nam
Vietnam CDC Thai Binh Thai Binh

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Vietnam Military Medical University Institute of Vaccines and Medical Biologicals, Vietnam, Vietstar Biomedical Research

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Vietnam, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of Subjects Experiencing Solicited Local and Systemic Adverse Events (AE) Solicited local and systemic AEs were assessed by study staff 30 minutes after vaccination. Within 30 minutes of vaccination
Primary Number of Subjects Experiencing Solicited Local and Systemic Adverse Events (AE) Solicited local AEs were assessed by study staff 30 minutes after vaccination then daily for 7 days within 7 days (day 1 to 7) of each vaccination
Primary Number of Subjects Experiencing Unsolicited Adverse Events (AE) Unsolicited AEs were observed by study staff while the subject is at a clinic for a study visit or reported by the subject at any time. Any sign or symptom that would normally be considered a "solicited AE" (for example, fever, nausea, injection site pain) starting after 7 days post-vaccination was to be recorded as an unsolicited AE within 21 days (age group 9-17 and older than 60 years) or 49 days (group 6 months to 8 years) after each vaccination
Primary Number of Subjects Experiencing Unsolicited Serious Adverse Events (SAE) A serious adverse event (SAE) is defined as an AE that meets one of the following conditions:
Deadly.
Life-threatening.
Requires inpatient hospital admission or extended stay in hospital.
Causes birth defects.
Causes permanent or permanent injury or disability.
Critical medical events that may not be fatal, not life-threatening, or require inpatient treatment will be considered a SAE if it is judged by professional judgment that the incident would be potentially dangerous. subject's health and the need for medical or surgical intervention to prevent one of the aforementioned consequences
Day 1 to Day 91
Primary Number of Subjects With Seroconversion of Hemagglutination Inhibition (HAI) Antibodies for Vaccine Antigens, Overall and by Age Group Serum specimens during Phase 3 were tested for the presence and titer of HAI antibodies to each one of the influenza strains represented in the vaccine Day 22 (+7) for groups 9 years and above or 49 (+7) for groups of 6 months to under 9 years
Secondary Number of Subjects With Hemagglutination Inhibition (HAI) Antibody tiers = 1:40 for each antigenic component of the vaccine Serum specimens during Phase 3 were tested for the presence and titer of HAI antibodies to each one of the influenza strains represented in the vaccine Day 22 or 49 after vaccination ( depending on age group)
Secondary Geometric Mean Titer (GMT) of Hemagglutination Inhibition (HAI) Antibodies for Vaccine Antigens at Baseline and Day 22 or 49 after vaccination (depending on age group) for each antigenic component of the vaccine Serum specimens during Phase 3 were tested for the presence and titer of HAI antibodies to each one of the influenza strains represented in the vaccine Day 0, Day 22 and Day 49
Secondary Geometric Mean Fold Change in HAI Antibody Titer, by Strain, Age Group, and Baseline Titer Serum specimens during Phase 3 were tested for the presence and titer of HAI antibodies to each one of the influenza strains represented in the vaccine Day 0, Day 22 and Day 49
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05523089 - The Effectiveness of CD388 to Prevent Flu in an Influenza Challenge Model in Healthy Adults Phase 2
Completed NCT05009251 - Using Explainable AI Risk Predictions to Nudge Influenza Vaccine Uptake N/A
Completed NCT03282240 - Safety and Immunogenicity of High-Dose Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine in Participants ≥65 Years in the US Phase 3
Completed NCT00968526 - Study to Evaluate Immunogenicity and Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT00971425 - Evaluation of the Immune Response and the Safety of a Pandemic Influenza Candidate Vaccine (H1N1) Phase 3
Completed NCT00968539 - Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity & Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT05525494 - Patient Portal Flu Vaccine Reminders (5) N/A
Completed NCT04074928 - Safety and Immunogenicity Study of QIVc in Healthy Pediatric Subjects Phase 3
Completed NCT05012163 - Lottery Incentive Nudges to Increase Influenza Vaccinations N/A
Completed NCT03888989 - Response to Influenza Vaccine During Pregnancy Phase 1
Completed NCT04109222 - Collection of Serum Samples From Children and Older Adults Receiving the 2019-2020 Formulations of Fluzone® Quadrivalent and Fluzone® High-Dose Influenza Vaccines, Respectively Phase 4
Completed NCT02587221 - Clinical Study to Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety and Immunogenicity of an MF59-Adjuvanted Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine Compared to Non-influenza Vaccine Comparator in Adults ≥ 65 Years of Age Phase 3
Completed NCT03453801 - The Role of CD4+ Memory Phenotype, Memory, and Effector T Cells in Vaccination and Infection Phase 1
Completed NCT01440387 - A Study of Immunogenicity and Safety of GSK Biologicals' Influenza Vaccine FLU-Q-QIV in Adults Aged 18 Years and Older Phase 3
Terminated NCT01195779 - Trial to Evaluate Safety and Immunogenicity of GSK Biologicals' Influenza Vaccine GSK2584786A in Healthy Children Phase 2
Completed NCT03321968 - Lot-to-lot Consistency of a Plant-Derived Quadrivalent Virus-Like Particles Influenza Vaccine in Healthy Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT00972517 - Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity and Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Children Phase 3
Completed NCT04570904 - Broadening Our Understanding of Early Versus Late Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness
Recruiting NCT03331991 - Prevention of Influenza and Other Wintertime Respiratory Viruses Among Healthcare Professionals in Israel N/A
Recruiting NCT06160128 - COVID-19 Pharmacotherapy Effectiveness in the VA Healthcare System