Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase 1 Study of the Safety of Immunization of Naive Individuals With AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel [R], an Asexual Blood-Stage Vaccine for Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria, and the Effect of Immunization on Antigen-specific Memory and Plasma B Cells and T Cells
This study will examine the safety and immune response of healthy adult volunteers to
AMA1-C1, an experimental malaria vaccine developed by the NIAID. Malaria affects about 300
million to 500 million people worldwide each year, causing from 2 million to 3 million
deaths. Increasing drug resistance to the malaria parasite, as well as widespread resistance
of mosquitoes (the insects that transmit the parasite) to pesticides are reducing the ability
to control malaria through these strategies. A vaccine that could reduce illness and death
from malaria would be a valuable new resource in the fight against this disease. Early tests
of AMA1-C1 in 66 people in the United States and in Mali, West Africa, found no serious side
effects of the vaccine. This study will test a shorter schedule of vaccinations with AMA1-C1
than that used in the previous studies.
Healthy volunteers between 18 and 50 years of age who weigh at least 110 pounds and with no
travel to malaria endemic areas in the past 12 months may be eligible for this study.
Candidates are screened with a medical history and physical examination, blood and urine
tests, and a urine pregnancy test for women who are able to bear children.
Participants are randomly assigned to receive three injections of either the experimental
malaria vaccine or a placebo (a solution that does not contain the vaccine) over a 2-month
period. The shots are given in an upper arm muscle, each 1 month apart. On the day of each
injection, participants give a history of symptoms since the last visit, have a brief
physical examination and blood test and, for women, a blood or urine pregnancy test. After
the injection, participants remain in the clinic 60 minutes for observation. In addition to
the injections, participants undergo the following procedures:
- Record temperature and symptoms on a diary card daily for the first 7 days after each
injection.
- Follow-up clinic visits 1, 3, 7 and 14 days after each shot to check for side effects.
Blood samples are drawn before each injection and at each return clinic visit to check
the safety and immune response to the vaccine.
- Have apheresis, a special procedure that separates certain components of the blood, 7
days after each injection to measure the function of germ-fighting blood cells. For this
procedure, blood is drawn through a needle in an arm vein and directed into a machine
that separates the different types of blood cells. The white cells are collected in a
plastic ...
The study is a randomized, single-blinded (blinded to volunteers) placebo-controlled Phase 1
clinical trial in healthy adult volunteers designed to evaluate the safety and reactogenicity
of a new malaria blood stage vaccine candidate, and to elucidate the immunogenicity of the
antigen, AMA1-C1, formulated on Alhydrogel [R]. The trial will last 42 weeks. Volunteers will
be recruited and screened, and those determined to be eligible will be enrolled in the study,
based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria described in Section 4.0 in this protocol.
After providing written informed consent the volunteers will be enrolled and randomly
allocated to receive 80 microgram dose of AMA1-C1 formulated on Alhydrogel [R] (12
volunteers) or Alhydrogel [R] alone (6 volunteers) at 0, 1 and 2 months. After each
injection, volunteers will be observed for 60 minutes for immediate reactions. Volunteers
will return to the clinic on study days 1, 3, 7, and 14 following each injection for clinical
assessment and collection of blood samples for evaluation of immune responses. Leukaphereses
will be performed 7 days after the third vaccination to obtain peripheral blood mononuclear
cells for B and T cell studies. Safety data for the cohort up to and including follow up day
14 after the first, second and third injection will be available for review by the Medical
Monitor.
Immunogenicity of the vaccine will be assessed by standardized assays for antibody levels
against AMA1-3D7 and AMA1-FVO, and an in vitro growth inhibition assay (GIA). The cellular
basis of the immune responses will be evaluated by enumeration of relevant B and T cell
subpopulations, including total and antigen-specific naive, memory and effector
subpopulations specific for the antigens. The frequencies of B and T cells specific for the
vaccine antigens in the group that received AMA1-C1/ Alhydrogel [R] will be compared to those
in the group receiving Alhydrogel [R] alone. The total and antigen-specific cell frequencies
in pre-immune (day 0) samples will serve as additional negative controls for the
immunization. The goal of the study is to augment previously collected safety data for the 80
microgram antigen dose with a larger cohort, and to study the safety and immunogenicity of an
accelerated vaccination schedule.
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