Normal Physiology Clinical Trial
Official title:
Elucidation of the Mucosal Immune Responses to Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine In Healthy Adults
Background:
- One form of the influenza vaccine is a nasal spray. It uses a live but weakened flu virus.
Researchers want to better under how the live vaccine interacts with the body s immune
system. They will test the nasal spray flu vaccine (called FluMist) against a saline (salt
water) nasal spray. They will then look at blood and nasal cell samples to see how the
vaccine affects these cells immune response.
Objectives:
- To look at immune changes in nasal and blood cells in people who receive live flu vaccine.
Eligibility:
- Healthy volunteers between 18 and 49 years of age.
Design:
- Participants will have five outpatient visits for this study. Each visit will last up to
2 hours.
- At the first visit, participants will have a physical exam and medical history. They
will give blood and urine samples. Nasal cell samples will also be collected.
- A week later, participants will have either the nasal spray flu vaccine or a saline
spray. They will know which spray they will receive. Blood samples will be collected.
- Two days after the vaccination, they will have another physical exam. Blood and nasal
cell samples will be collected.
- At the final two visits (1 week and 1 month after the vaccination), more blood samples
will be collected.
- Those who had the saline spray will be able to have the actual vaccine spray at the last
study visit.
- The ratio of participants who receive vaccine to those who receive saline will be 4:1.
Two types of influenza vaccines are currently licensed in the US, trivalent inactivated
vaccine (TIV), administered by intramuscular injection, and LAIV, administered by nasal
spray. Both vaccines are safe and effective in their approved age groups. Neutralizing
antibody in the serum has been found to be a correlate of protection for TIV, but the immune
correlates of protection for LAIV are not known. Defining the origin and nature of
transcriptional responses to LAIV in URT in infected and bystander epithelial and lymphocyte
cells in healthy adults will be a highly informative first step in a systems approach toward
understanding the molecular basis of viral replication restriction and the regulation of the
local mucosal immune responses following LAIV administration.
This natural history study will use a systems biology approach to identify LAIV replication
niches among a variety of URT cell types and characterize the host immune response to LAIV.
Healthy volunteers aged 18-49 years will be prescreened for low (<1:10) serum HAI titer
against the component influenza vaccine virus strains (influenza A H1N1 and H3N2, and
influenza B) of the licensed seasonal LAIV. Ten HAIlow or -negative individuals will be
vaccinated intranasally with LAIV (n=8) or will receive saline intranasally (n=2). One week
prior to and 2 days after vaccine administration, an NP specimen will be collected using
flocked NP swabs. A blood sample will be collected at the time of NP swabbing and on Days 7
and 28 after vaccination. Total subject participation time from enrollment/baseline to the
final study visit will be 5 weeks.
We propose to recover cells from NP swab samples and sort individual cells of different
subsets based on specific surface phenotypic markers. We will then utilize
microfluidics-based real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) to
quantify transcripts from bulk and single cells. These transcripts will include
strand-specific influenza RNA for determining virus replication, genes for assigning cells to
specific epithelial or lymphocyte subpopulations, selected genes in the IFN signaling
pathways to determine innate immune responses, and genes involved in activation and effector
functions of different immune cell subsets. Results will be analyzed with several
bioinformatics tools, with an emphasis on the differential signaling responses between
various cells types. The mucosal transcriptional data will be correlated with B and T cell
immunity markers and traditional serology (HAI and neutralization assays) before and after
vaccination to identify key factors affecting the immune response to LAIV.
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