Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary purpose of this study is to find out the risk of spreading the vaccine virus, vaccinia, from the smallpox vaccination site when different types of bandages are used to cover the site. The study will also look at how each bandage type affects the healing of the sore. Study participants will include healthy individuals, 18-50 years old, who have not previously received a smallpox vaccine and healthy individuals, 18-50 years old, who have received a previous smallpox vaccine. All participants will receive the smallpox vaccine and be randomly assigned to 1 of 3 different bandage groups to cover the vaccine site: standard gauze dressing attached with paper tape, Opsite gauze-impregnanted occlusive dressing (attached by paper tape and waterproof), and Allevyn hydropolymer dressing (which is self-adhesive and highly absorbent). Volunteers will be involved in study related procedures for up to 252 days.


Clinical Trial Description

This study will investigate the potential for secondary transmission of vaccinia from smallpox vaccination sites covered by various types of dressings, as well as the effects of each dressing type on the healing of the vaccination lesion. The results could have great implications for infection control and public health in the wake of potential mass smallpox vaccination. The study population will consist of two cohorts: healthy individuals who are naive to the smallpox vaccine ("naive group") and healthy individuals who have had previous vaccination with the smallpox vaccine ("experienced group"). Individuals in each group will be vaccinated with a dose of smallpox vaccine diluted to 1:5 and will be randomized to receive one of three dressing preparations to cover the vaccination site: standard 2 inch x 2 inch gauze attached to the skin via paper tape ("Gauze dressing"); Opsite gauze-impregnated occlusive dressing ("occlusive dressing"); and Allevyn hydropolymer dressing (Smith and Nephew, "hydropolymer dressing"). In addition, 30 of the 108 subjects (15 naïve and 15 experienced) will be enrolled as a "cardiac subgroup" and will have additional blood drawn for the assessment of specific biochemical markers related to thrombosis and platelet activation (specifically, plasminogen-activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) and soluble CD40 ligand (sCD40L). The primary study objective will be the assessment of infectivity of vaccination sites via evaluation of vaccinia growth from specimens of the outer dressing for each bandage type. Positive culture reflects failure of the bandage to prevent possible spread of vaccinia. Secondary study objectives include the following: assessment of infectivity of vaccination sites via evaluation of vaccinia growth from specimens from the hand contralateral to the vaccine site for each dressing type; comparison of the rate of lesion healing (time from vaccination until lesion is deemed "well-healed") for each dressing cohort; association of adverse events (AEs) involved with transmission of vaccinia, such as autoinoculation and secondary dissemination, with the type of dressing covering the vaccination site; and determination of the alterations after smallpox vaccination in the body's endogenous fibrinolytic system to investigate the potential pathophysiology of adverse ischemic cardiac events seen in vaccinated subjects in the recent civilian and military campaigns. The tertiary objectives of the study include: assessment of the overall safety profile in each cohort, as determined by reactogenicity of the vaccine and the development of expected and unexpected AEs unrelated to dressing type; assessment of the efficacy of a 1:5 dilution of APSV in vaccinia-experienced adults as measured by the proportion of individuals who respond to vaccination with a "take: 6-11 days after vaccination; characterization of the humoral immune response generated following vaccination in each cohort; assessment of pharyngeal carriage and shedding of vaccinia virus in each cohort of vaccinated volunteers; and assessment of the tolerability of the dressing and total number of bandage changes determined from a volunteer questionnaire and summarized by bandage type. Volunteers will be followed for 56 days following their primary vaccination. Volunteers who do not have a "take" will be offered revaccination under a separate protocol after their 56-day blood sample is drawn. All volunteers will be contacted by telephone for information about serious adverse events at or about 180 days after their primary vaccination. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00063856
Study type Interventional
Source National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date July 2003
Completion date June 2004

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05976100 - Study of the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics of NIOCH-14 in Volunteers Aged 18-50 Years Phase 1
Completed NCT01540929 - Post-licensure Department of Defense (DOD) Screening Accuracy Study in Military Personnel
Completed NCT00258947 - Evaluation of Take and Safety of a Smallpox Vaccine in Healthy Young Adults Phase 2
Completed NCT00189969 - Take Rate, Immunogenicity and Safety of Elstree-BN Smallpox Vaccine in Healthy Vaccinia-Naive Subjects Phase 1
Terminated NCT00053508 - Dose Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of a New Smallpox Vaccine in Adults Without Previous Smallpox Vaccination Phase 2
Completed NCT01317238 - Safety and Efficacy of CJ Smallpox Vaccine in Previously Vaccinated Healthy Volunteers Phase 3
Completed NCT01056770 - Safety and Efficacy of CJ Smallpox Vaccine in Healthy Volunteers Phase 3
Terminated NCT00282581 - Safety Study of MVA Smallpox Vaccine in HIV-positive Subjects Who Are Vaccinia Naive Phase 1
Completed NCT00998543 - A Long-Term Study of Healthy Adults Vaccinated With One Dose of Smallpox Vaccine (LISTER Strain) Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT00389103 - Safety Study of MVA Smallpox Vaccine in Subjects With a History of Atopic Dermatitis (AD) Phase 1
Completed NCT00133575 - ACAM 3000 MVA at Harvard Medical School Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT00103584 - Safety and Immunogenicity Study of LC16m8, a Modified Smallpox Vaccine, in Healthy, Previously Unvaccinated Volunteers Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00050505 - Expanded Dryvax Dilution Study in Previously Vaccinated Adults Phase 2
Completed NCT05846243 - Study on Immunogenicity, Reactogenicity and Safety of the VACΔ6 Vaccine in Volunteers Aged 18-60 Years Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT05935917 - Study Evaluating the Bioequivalence of Brincidofovir Form H and Form II Tablets in Healthy Adults Phase 1
Completed NCT00082446 - Combination Study With MVA BN and Dryvax Phase 1
Completed NCT00038987 - Vaccinia Virus Vaccine (APSV) in Vaccinia- Naive Subjects: PILOT Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT05762523 - Safety and Tolerability Study of the VAC∆6 Vaccine in Volunteers Aged 18-40 Years Phase 1
Completed NCT04971109 - Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics of TPOXX When Administered Orally for 28 Day Phase 3
Completed NCT00646152 - Poly-ICLC to Prevent Respiratory Viral Infections A Safety Study Phase 1