View clinical trials related to Influenza, Human.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to investigate the immunogenicity and safety of the inactivated whole-virion vaccine for teenagers and adults. The investigators will test the vaccine in participants aged above 12 years, for a randomized, blind, placebo-controlled, clinical study. The investigators designed one dosage groups: 15 μg of hemagglutinin antigen. Control group is designed to inoculate seasonal influence vaccine and aluminum hydroxide adjuvant. Participants will receive 2 doses of vaccine at 21-day intervals. Safety up to 6 months and changes in hemagglutinin inhibition (HI) titers at 21 days after each vaccination will be determined.
Parallel group, investigator initiated, 1:1, open-label, non-inferiority randomized controlled trial, aiming to show that paracetamol is non-inferior to oseltamivir among patients with serious acute respiratory infection (SARI).
Each winter, viruses belonging to two kinds of influenza A ("A/H1N1" & "A/H3N2") and two kinds of influenza B ("B/Yamagata" & "B/Victoria") can cause illness. Historically, the yearly influenza vaccine that was recommended in children was designed to protect against both kinds of influenza A but only one kind of influenza B. In a series of trials conducted between 2008-09 and 2010-11 (TITRE I, II, and IIB), the TITRE investigators measured antibody response to influenza B in children who were primed with two doses of trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV) containing B/Yamagata. Overall, the investigators found that 2 doses of vaccine containing B/Yamagata did not adequately prime children for response to the alternate B/Victoria antigen and that subsequent vaccine doses containing B/Victoria-lineage antigen strongly boosted antibodies to the B/Yamagata antigen that was introduced during first immunization priming, but with lower responses to B/Victoria. For the first time since 2009-10, the recommended B/Victoria component of the seasonal influenza vaccine has been changed, from B/Brisbane/60/2008 to B/Colorado/60/2007 for the coming 2018-19 season. The investigators thus have a unique opportunity to clarify lineage-specific influenza B responses in a well-characterized cohort of children originally primed to Yamagata. The investigators' main interest is to assess whether TITRE I children primed with two doses of B/Yamagata in 2008-09 have since or are now capable of achieving a sufficient antibody response to B/Victoria following a single dose of 2018-19 QIV, ten years after their initial TIV B/Yamagata priming exposure.
Immunization with the inactivated influenza vaccine with blood samples collected at 7 visits (baseline, day 7, 14, 28, 60, 90 and 180, fine needle aspiration (FNAs) from axillary lymph nodes at baseline, days, 4, 14, 28, 60 and 180. BMA at baseline, days 28 and 180.
The aim of this study is to test the effectiveness of communicating the concept of herd immunity on actual influenza vaccine uptake using a randomized controlled trial.
This trial is aimed to study the immunological and pathological characteristics of influenza versus non-influenza severe community-acquired pneumonia patients in ICU.
This study evaluates safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of two doses of GHB04L1, a liquid formulation of the replication- deficient influenza A/Vietnam/1203/04(H5N1)-like ∆NS1 virus in healthy adults. Subjects are randomised at a ratio of 2:1 for GHB04L1 (6.8 log10 or 7.5 log10 TCID50/dose/volunteer) or placebo.
The aim of this study is to assess the immunogenicity and safety of a quadrivalent influenza vaccine compared with a trivalent influenza vaccine in participants aged above 3 years.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the body's immune response at different time points to an FDA-approved seasonal influenza vaccine. By better understanding the way the immune system responds to the influenza vaccine, the investigators can design more effective vaccines against influenza.
This is a single center phase I, double-blind placebo-controlled study to assess reactogenicity, safety and immunogenicity of a live monovalent A/17/Hong Kong/2017/75108 (H7N9) influenza vaccine in healthy male and female adults, 18 through 49 years of age.