View clinical trials related to Influenza.
Filter by:The primary objective of the study was to provide sera (collected from participants before vaccination [Blood Sample 1] and after final vaccination [Blood Sample 2]) to the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) for further analysis by the World Health Organization (WHO), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to support formulation recommendations for subsequent influenza vaccines.
This is a non-controlled, open-label, single-center, dose-escalation study to determine the safety, infectivity, and immune responses elicited from of the potential influenza virus challenge strain. The study objective is to determine the dose with the optimal safety profile and infectivity rate of the viral challenge strain in healthy volunteers for use in subsequent challenge intervention studies to test potential influenza vaccines and/or therapeutics.
This study will examine how various FDA-approved seasonal influenza vaccine types, used in a manner consistent with their approved use, impact the characteristics of influenza specific antibodies in humans, and how these responses differ based on age and prior immunization history.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the antibody response to each of the four influenza vaccine strains included in the study vaccine, as measured by hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) at 4 weeks after the last dose of the study vaccine in young subjects aged between 3 years old and 17 years old.
Subjects will be recruited and divided into 3 groups: 1. Experimental Group (378 subjects): combined immunization of EV71 vaccine and influenza vaccine; 2. Control Group A (378 subjects): EV71 vaccine only; 3. Control Group B (378 subjects): influenza vaccine only; All blood samples will be collected before and one month after vaccinatioin. The immunogenicity and safety of both experimental and control groups will be compared and the data be analyzed.
This phase 3 clinical study is a randomized, observer-blind, comparator-controlled, multicenter study of QIVc versus a US-licensed comparator QIV in children 6 months through 47 months of age. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that vaccination with QIVc elicits an immune response that is noninferior to that of a US-licensed comparator QIV containing the same virus strains, in children 6 months through 47 months of age.
The purpose of the study is to compare Emergency Department patients who undergo influenza and RSV PCR testing using an FDA-approved point-of-care device (Cepheid Xpert® Xpress Flu/RSV) located in the ED, to patients who undergo influenza and RSV PCR testing at the core laboratory. The principal purpose is to determine if the time spent in the ED is different in the group undergoing POC influenza testing compared to those undergoing laboratory-based influenza testing.
This is a study of a reverse-engineered, Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) grade, antiviral-sensitive, influenza A/Bethesda/MM2/H1N1 virus (A/California/04/2009/H1N1-like) infection to assess the effect of pre-existing immunity on clinical and immunological responses. Up to 80 healthy adult subjects will undergo intranasal inoculation with A/Bethesda/MM2/H1N1 virus, and their clinical manifestations, viral shedding and immunological responses will be characterized. The Primary Objective for this study is to evaluate the association of symptomatic Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR)-positive influenza virus infection post-challenge and pre-existing Hemagglutinin Inhibition Test (HAI) antibody titers.
Otherwise healthy index patients (IP) are randomized to either baloxavir marboxil or placebo if their influenza symptoms onset was within 48 hours of screening. Their households are enrolled within 24 hours of randomization if at least 1 household contacts (HHC) have not received influenza vaccine within 6 months of screening and if all HHC screen negative for influenza infection. The main endpoints are assessed based on multiple respiratory swabs, obtained from both IP and HHC up to 9 (+/-1) days post IP randomization, and through the assessment of symptoms.
Based on recent evidence on the mutation of the A/H3N2 strain in egg-grown vaccine, the investigators will study the quadrivalent recombinant influenza vaccine (RIV4, Flublok) compared to the standard dose quadrivalent vaccine (IV4) in a cohort of long-stay NH residents with a primary endpoint of all-cause hospitalization.