View clinical trials related to Adenoviridae Infections.
Filter by:This is a Phase 3 study to evaluate posoleucel (ALVR105, Viralym-M); an allogeneic, off-the-shelf multi-virus specific T cell therapy that targets six viral pathogens: BK virus, cytomegalovirus, adenovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, human herpesvirus 6 and JC virus.
This study will assess the safety and efficacy of Posoleucel for the treatment of adenovirus (AdV) infection in pediatric and adult allo-HCT recipients receiving standard of care (SoC).
This study was designed to assess the safety, overall tolerability, and antiviral activity of "short course" brincidofovir (BCV) therapy, as compared with current standard of care (SoC), for the treatment of adenovirus (AdV) infections in high-risk (i.e., T cell depleted) pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients. A virologic response-driven approach to the duration of treatment was to be evaluated, in which subjects randomized to BCV therapy were to be treated until AdV viremia was confirmed as undetectable or until a maximum of 16 weeks of therapy, whichever occurred first. The formulation of BCV used in this study was oral tablet/suspension.
PXVX0047 (Adenovirus Type 4 and Type 7 Vaccine [A549 Cells], Live, Oral) is an investigational vaccine in development for the indication of active immunization against adenovirus infection. The primary goals of this Phase 1 study are to evaluate safety, pharmacodynamics (viral shedding), and immunogenicity of PXVX0047.
The objective is data collection to determine background rates of adenovirus (AdV) progression and mortality in subjects with Adenovirus (AdV) infection and/or disease.
The use of a designed viral vector that can destroy cancer cells while leaving normal cells largely unharmed. The virus also stimulates an immunological response by producing a special factor (GM-CSF) to attract and promote the development of dendritic and T effector cells. It forms the hypothesis that this regimen may be used for people who have failed current forms of treatment and are recommended for cystectomy. It is with hope that this novel therapy will be able to delay or potentially avoid cystectomy for this patient population. Bladder instillation of this agent causes little long lasting side effects and may drastically improve the stimulation of the immune system for local cancer cell death as well as destroying those tumor cells that may have travelled to regional lymph nodes or distant organs.
The main objective of this study is to evaluate the clinical and biologic toxicity of cell therapy by adoptive transfer of TIL in combination with intra-tumoral injections of Ad-INFg.
The purpose of this Phase 1 study is to evaluate the safety and immune responses of a new tuberculosis vaccine, Ad5Ag85A, administered to healthy volunteers. 48 subjects will be recruited, 24 who have previously been vaccinated with BCG and 24 who have not received BCG vaccine. Two doses of the vaccine will be compared.