Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

As the global availability of vaccines increases, and reaches areas disproportionately affected by arsenic and malnutrition, resolving questions about potential environmental and biologic barriers to maternal immunization has become increasingly urgent. It is not known whether arsenic, a known developmental toxicant, can alter maternal immune responses to vaccination and whether exposure to arsenic during pregnancy can impair the transfer of maternal vaccine-induced antibody to the newborn. Moreover, factors known to affect arsenic metabolism and toxicity outcomes, particularly micronutrients critical in one-carbon metabolism, have not been evaluated in studies of arsenic immunotoxicity and vaccine-induced protection in mothers and their newborns. The objective in this study is to investigate whether maternal arsenic exposure and one-carbon metabolism micronutrient deficiencies alter maternal and newborn measures of vaccine-induced protection, respiratory morbidity, and systemic immune function following influenza vaccination during pregnancy.


Clinical Trial Description

The objective in this study is to investigate whether maternal arsenic exposure and one-carbon metabolism micronutrient deficiencies alter maternal and newborn measures of vaccine-induced protection, respiratory morbidity, and systemic immune function following influenza vaccination during pregnancy. The hypothesis is that maternal arsenic exposure and one-carbon metabolism micronutrient deficiencies alter maternal and newborn influenza antibody titer and avidity, respiratory infection morbidity, and markers of systemic immune function following maternal influenza vaccination during pregnancy. This study leverages a comprehensive pregnancy surveillance system at the JiVitA Maternal and Child Health and Nutrition Research Project site in Bangladesh (hereafter JiVitA) to pursue the following three aims: Aim 1. Establish whether arsenic exposure during pregnancy alters maternal and newborn influenza antibody titer and avidity following maternal influenza vaccination. Aim 2. Determine whether markers of systemic immune function mediate the association between arsenic exposure and respiratory illness in pregnant women and their newborns. Aim 3. Assess whether arsenic exposure and one-carbon metabolism micronutrient deficiencies during pregnancy have a joint effect on markers of systemic immune function and respiratory illness in mothers and their newborns. This study will yield three expected outcomes. First, it will fill critical knowledge gaps about whether arsenic exposure and one-carbon metabolism micronutrient deficiencies alter immune responses to a vaccination with known benefits for mothers and their newborns. Second, it will increase understanding of arsenic-associated respiratory morbidity and specific immune function pathways between arsenic exposure and respiratory morbidity in mothers and their newborns. Finally, as the global availability of vaccines increases, improving knowledge of potential environmental and biologic barriers to maternal and newborn vaccine-induced protection could lead to improved vaccine regimens (targeted vaccination campaigns, higher vaccine doses, and/or additional booster immunizations) to restore vaccine-induced protection in arsenic-exposed and malnutrition-affected populations of pregnant women and newborns worldwide. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03930017
Study type Observational
Source Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date October 14, 2018
Completion date January 6, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05523089 - The Effectiveness of CD388 to Prevent Flu in an Influenza Challenge Model in Healthy Adults Phase 2
Completed NCT05009251 - Using Explainable AI Risk Predictions to Nudge Influenza Vaccine Uptake N/A
Completed NCT03282240 - Safety and Immunogenicity of High-Dose Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine in Participants ≥65 Years in the US Phase 3
Completed NCT00968539 - Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity & Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT00968526 - Study to Evaluate Immunogenicity and Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT00971425 - Evaluation of the Immune Response and the Safety of a Pandemic Influenza Candidate Vaccine (H1N1) Phase 3
Completed NCT05525494 - Patient Portal Flu Vaccine Reminders (5) N/A
Completed NCT04074928 - Safety and Immunogenicity Study of QIVc in Healthy Pediatric Subjects Phase 3
Completed NCT04695717 - This Study Was Conducted to Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of IVACFLU-S Produced in Children From 6 Months to Under 18 Years Old and the Elderly Over 60 Years Old in Vietnam Phase 3
Completed NCT05012163 - Lottery Incentive Nudges to Increase Influenza Vaccinations N/A
Completed NCT04109222 - Collection of Serum Samples From Children and Older Adults Receiving the 2019-2020 Formulations of Fluzone® Quadrivalent and Fluzone® High-Dose Influenza Vaccines, Respectively Phase 4
Completed NCT03888989 - Response to Influenza Vaccine During Pregnancy Phase 1
Completed NCT02587221 - Clinical Study to Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety and Immunogenicity of an MF59-Adjuvanted Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine Compared to Non-influenza Vaccine Comparator in Adults ≥ 65 Years of Age Phase 3
Completed NCT03453801 - The Role of CD4+ Memory Phenotype, Memory, and Effector T Cells in Vaccination and Infection Phase 1
Completed NCT01440387 - A Study of Immunogenicity and Safety of GSK Biologicals' Influenza Vaccine FLU-Q-QIV in Adults Aged 18 Years and Older Phase 3
Terminated NCT01195779 - Trial to Evaluate Safety and Immunogenicity of GSK Biologicals' Influenza Vaccine GSK2584786A in Healthy Children Phase 2
Completed NCT03321968 - Lot-to-lot Consistency of a Plant-Derived Quadrivalent Virus-Like Particles Influenza Vaccine in Healthy Adults Phase 3
Completed NCT00972517 - Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity and Safety of an Investigational Influenza Vaccine (H1N1) in Children Phase 3
Completed NCT04570904 - Broadening Our Understanding of Early Versus Late Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness
Recruiting NCT03331991 - Prevention of Influenza and Other Wintertime Respiratory Viruses Among Healthcare Professionals in Israel N/A