Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important cause of illness and occasional deaths in infants who catch the virus before they are born, in newborns, and in children and adults who have weak immune systems. The purpose of this study is to look at how the CMV vaccine works in the blood. This study is being done along with the main CMV gB/MF59 vaccine study that looks at how the overall body reacts to the vaccine. Participants will include up to 100 healthy adolescent female subjects aged 12 to 17 years who were vaccinated in study 04-039 and 100 subjects that were screened for 04-039 to participate as controls. Study procedures will include up to 6 blood draws taken over a 13 month period. Participation will be about 31 months (unless the patient enrolls into the shedding study).


Clinical Trial Description

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important cause of morbidity and occasional mortality in congenitally infected infants and immuno-compromised children and adults, especially human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals and transplant recipients. Newborn infants represent a particularly high-risk group. This study of cell-mediated immune responses to cytomegalovirus GB/MF59 vaccine is a substudy of Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, NIAID, NIH, DHHS (DMID) protocol 04-039, "A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Phase II Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of the Cytomegalovirus gB/MF59 Vaccine in Preventing Systemic Cytomegalovirus Infection in Healthy Adolescent Females." This vaccine trial is designed to test the safety and efficacy of the CMV gB/MF59 vaccine. Primary goals of this study are to assess whether injection with 3 doses of the CMV gB/MF59 vaccine induces significant CD4+, CD8+ and/or regulatory T cell immune responses; to evaluate the boosting affect of gB/MF59 on the CMV-specific T cell responses after each of 3 doses of vaccine; to evaluate the persistence of CMV-specific T cell responses after vaccination; and to evaluate CMV-specific T cell responses in subjects that seroconvert during the vaccine trial. New techniques for the enumeration and characterization of antigen specific T cells are now available that will facilitate a precise analysis of the magnitude and functional capacity of influenza virus-specific T cells. All subjects enrolled in the CMV gB/MF59 trial at Vanderbilt and Cincinnati study sites will be eligible for enrollment in the cell-mediated immune response sub-study. Blood draws for assessment of cellular immune response will be obtained in 3 phases. Phase 1, N=50: at visit 1, the initial 100 consented subjects to recruit approximately 50 seropositive subjects (based on a 60 percent seropositive rate). Samples from this phase of the study will be used to establish the optimal conditions for the assay and to compare natural infection with vaccine induced T cell responses. Phase 2, N=50-100: at day 0 (before 1st dose of vaccine), day 30 (before the second dose of vaccine), day 60 (1 month after the second dose of vaccine), day 210 (1 month after the last dose of vaccine), and day 390 (7 months after the last dose of vaccine). Samples from this phase will be used to evaluate the boosting affect of gB/MF59 after each of 3 doses of vaccine and to evaluate the persistence of CMV-specific T cell responses. Phase 3: at each visit (S1-S8) for those subjects that seroconvert (i.e. if subject seroconverts at visit 10 blood will be obtained at visits S1-S8). These samples will be used to compare CMV-specific responses in subjects that either did or did not receive the vaccine and seroconvert during the study. These time points are based on the vaccine study design and the previous work evaluating T cell responses to vaccination 1 month and 6 months after immunization. Researchers will collect 30 ml of blood per draw in this trial enrolling up to 100 healthy adolescent females 12-17 years of age, inclusive. Blood volumes were determined to ensure sufficient numbers of cells to establish stimulation protocols and evaluate cell-mediated immune responses. The study duration will be 43 months. Subject duration will be 31 months, unless the subject seroconverts and enrolls into the shedding study. This study is linked to DMID protocol 04-039. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00815165
Study type Observational
Source National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 2006
Completion date August 2011

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT03950414 - A Dose-Escalation Study Evaluating Safety and Tolerability of Viral-Specific T Cells Against CMV in Adult Solid Organ Transplant Recipients Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04690933 - AntiCMV molécules Monitoring in Real-life in Stem Cell Recipients
Withdrawn NCT04936971 - Introduction of mTor Inhibitors and the Activation of the Cytomegalovirus (CMV) -Specific Cellular Immune Response Phase 4
Recruiting NCT02671318 - Conversion to Sirolimus: Effects in Cytomegalovirus Infection Recurrence Phase 4
Completed NCT01325636 - Injection of CD4 and CD8 + T Cells Anti-Cytomegalovirus (CMV) or Anti-adenovirus Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT00228202 - Genotyping of Cytomegalovirus From Patients in Israel N/A
Completed NCT00031421 - Neonatal CMV-Ganciclovir Follow-up Study N/A
Completed NCT00005496 - Inflammation, Infection, and Future Cardiovascular Risk N/A
Terminated NCT03262194 - Relevance of Gastric Aspirate in HCMV Detection
Completed NCT04478474 - Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Viremia and Disease Occurrence in Pediatric Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation Recipients
Recruiting NCT05370976 - Efficacy and Safety of Cytotect®CP, Hyperimmune Anti-CMV IVIg as CMV Prophylaxis in Patients Developing Acute Grade II-IV GVHD After Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation. Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT02943057 - Topical 2% Ganciclovir Eye Drop for CMV Anterior Uveitis / Endotheliitis Phase 4
Completed NCT02538172 - Cell-mediated Immunity for Prevention of CMV Disease N/A
Completed NCT02642822 - The Epidemiologic Study of Human Cytomegalovirus(CMV) in Female Students of Xiamen University N/A
Completed NCT02134184 - The Influence of Chronic CMV Infection on Influenza Vaccine Responses Phase 4
Completed NCT00673868 - Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL) When Used for Prophylaxis Against CMV in Recipients of Allogeneic, T Cell Depleted Stem Cell Transplants Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT05089630 - A Study of Safety and Immune Response to Different Doses of a Cytomegalovirus Vaccine in Healthy Adults Phase 1/Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT06058858 - Incidence and Risks Factors of CMV Reactivation in Patients Receiving of CAR-T Cells for Acute Leukemia and Lymphoma Relapse, a Cohort Study Analysis
Active, not recruiting NCT04904614 - Letermovir Use in Heart Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Completed NCT01986010 - Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of the Human Cytomegalovirus Vaccine (V160) in Healthy Adults (V160-001) Phase 1