View clinical trials related to Influenza.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of triple combination antiviral drug (TCAD) for use in immunocompromised patients with Influenza A infection, and to gain data on the effectiveness of TCAD
This observer-blind study is designed to evaluate the immune response and safety of pandemic influenza vaccine in the elderly population.
Primary Objective: To describe the safety of the 2004-2005 pediatric formulation of the inactivated, split-virion influenza vaccine Fluzone®, given in the two-dose schedule (described in the package insert for vaccine-naïve young children) to the investigational and control groups. Observational Objective: To describe the percentage of protective Hemagglutination Inhibition (HAI) antibody titers (following a 2-dose Fluzone® immunization series) to each of the 3 vaccine antigens among the investigational and control groups.
Over the past decade, avian influenza (AI) has become a major health concern. The development of safe and effective vaccines against avian strains that infect people is important. The purpose of this study is to determine the safety of and immune response of an investigational AI vaccine in healthy adults against the H7N3 strain of avian influenza.
This is a first in man study evaluating the tolerability and immunogenicity of BIPCV/IMX (V512) at increasing concentrations of influenza viral peptides A/M2+B/HA0 peptides and IMX, a saponin-based adjuvant.
This study will evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of different combinations of influenza vaccine in healthy young children.
The study will evaluate the safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of different doses and types of Influenza Vaccine in healthy elderly subjects.
Primary Objective: To describe the immune response to a single administration of 2 formulations of the investigational cell-based influenza vaccines in healthy adult subjects. Secondary Objective: To describe the safety following a single administration of 2 formulations of the investigational cell-based influenza vaccines in healthy adult subjects.
Rates of confirmed influenza illness in vaccinated and non-vaccinated children will be compared between schools with and without vaccination programs. The investigators hypothesize that in addition to lowering rates of influenza in vaccinated children, raising vaccination rates by 30-40% through school-based vaccination programs will decrease incidence of influenza in non-vaccinated children attending those schools compared to non-vaccinated children in schools with low vaccination rates.
To describe the safety findings from Days 0 to 44 following injection of the 2003-2004 pediatric formulation of the inactivated, split-virion influenza vaccine Fluzone®, given in the two-dose schedule in accordance with the Package Insert, in children aged ≥ 6 months to < 36 months. To describe the immunogenicity findings from Days 0 to 44 following injection of the 2003-2004 pediatric formulation of the inactivated, split-virion influenza vaccine Fluzone®, given in the two-dose schedule in accordance with the Package Insert, in children aged ≥ 6 months to < 36 months