Common Cold Clinical Trial
Official title:
Experimental Human Rhinovirus Infection, a Randomized Placebo-controlled Pilot Study
Our primary objective is to set up the Human Rhinovirus (HRV)-model in our centre. In addition, to facilitate future clinical trials, we want to determine optimal read-out parameters and read-out time points for experimental HRV infection in healthy volunteers. Furthermore, we want to analyze to what extent HRV can cause systemic immune effects, and we want to test if subjects with antibodies against HRV can be re-infected with the same virus, and if the presence of HRV antibodies influences the local clinical and immunological response upon infection. Additionally, to gain insight in the immune modulating properties of HRV, we want to investigate the immunological response to a HRV re-infection within one week to determine if there are mechanisms that provide immediate protection against re-infection. This facilitates a cross-over design of future pharmacological intervention-trials. Furthermore, we want to investigate the capacity of HRV infection to modulate the systemic immune response by analyzing the response of leukocytes ex vivo stimulated with different stimuli. Moreover, we want to evaluate the effects of HRV-16 infection on the host transcriptome and metabolome. Finally, The influence of HRV-16 infection on nasal and gut microbiota will be assessed.
The importance of the common cold derives primarily from its frequency and from its enormous
socioeconomic impact. Human Rhinoviruses (HRVs) are the major cause of the common cold,
being responsible for 30-50% of all acute respiratory illnesses with no causal remedies at
hand. A model to investigate the pathophysiology of HRV infection and to test compounds that
could treat or protect one from infection or developing symptoms would therefore be very
valuable. With this HRV model it is also possible to investigate crosstalk between bacteria
and viruses. This is very relevant because, following a viral infection, bacterial
superinfections are common in clinical practice, and underlying mechanisms and subsequent
possible therapies that could prevent this remain to be discovered. Worldwide, thousands of
subjects have been exposed to experimental rhinovirus infection, of which more than 600 to
HRV-16. Serious adverse events related to rhinovirus infection have never been documented.
Therefore, this model can be considered a safe and highly reproducible model. Moreover, 52
volunteers have already been exposed to the HRV-16 virus from the batch that we want to use
in this study.
Healthy volunteers who meet all inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion criteria that
have given informed consent to participate in the study will be randomized to become either
inoculated with HRV-16 (n=20; 10 male+10 female) or with placebo (saline 0.9%, n=20, 10
male+ 10 female). After one week a second inoculation with HRV-16 will be performed in both
groups. In both groups, 50% of the subjects will be sero-negative and 50% sero-positive to
HRV-16. One hundred TCID50 units of HRV-16 (by spraying 0.5 mL into each nostril in supine
position in a randomized manner) will be administered.
The main study parameter is the rate of infection (defined by a positive viral culture, qPCR
and/or a four-fold rise in antibody titre) caused by HRV-16 inoculation. Secondary endpoints
include the duration of the incubation period, the effects of HRV-16 (re-)infection on cold
symptoms and spirometry, kinetics of HRV-16-induced local inflammation parameters in nasal
washes (including immune cells and cytokine production), kinetics of the HRV-16-induced
systemic immune response (including circulating cytokines), the ability of HRV to modulate
the systemic immune response (as reflected by the ex vivo production of inflammatory
mediators by stimulated leukocytes), the effects of seropositivity on clinical and
immunological responses, and the effects of HRV-16 infection on faecal and nasal-pharyngeal
microbiota and host transcriptome and metabolome.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics/Dynamics Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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