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Safety and Immunogenicity Study of Influenza Vaccines in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected Pregnant Women in Western Kenya

Information source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on August 20, 2015
Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.

Condition(s) targeted: Influenza, Human; HIV; Malaria; Tetanus; Polio

Intervention: Quadrivalent Inactivated Influenza Vaccine (QIV) (Biological); Inactivated Polio Vaccine (Biological); Double Dose QIV (Biological)

Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3

Status: Withdrawn

Sponsored by: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s):
Meredith L McMorrow, MD, MPH, Study Director, Affiliation: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Joshua A Mott, PhD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Kenya Country Office
Nancy Otieno, MS, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Kenya Medical Research Institute
Marc-Alain Widdowson, VetMB, MSc, Study Director, Affiliation: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Summary

In 2012, the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) concluded that pregnant women are the most important risk group for season influenza vaccination based upon "compelling evidence of substantial risk of severe disease in this group and evidence that seasonal influenza vaccine is safe and effective in preventing disease in pregnant women as well as their young infants, in whom disease burden is also high". Recent data from Kenya, similarly suggest rates of influenza-associated hospitalizations in children under age 1 to be as high, or higher, than those observed in the United States. However, TIV may have reduced immunogenicity in HIV-infected adults, and HIV infection has been shown to reduce placental transfer of both tetanus and measles antibodies. Therefore, we propose to conduct a double-blind randomized controlled trial of influenza vaccines stratified by HIV status in up to 720 pregnant women in their second and third trimesters and their infants residing in health and demographic surveillance sites (HDSS) in Nyanza Province, Western Kenya. We propose to assess the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of standard dose QIV and double dose QIV in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected pregnant women. Findings will inform maternal influenza vaccination policies in Kenya and other African countries.

Clinical Details

Official title: A Double-Blind, Randomized, Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Safety, Immunogenicity, and Efficacy of Standard Dose Quadrivalent Inactivated Influenza Vaccine, and Double Dose Quadrivalent Inactivated Influenza Vaccine in HIV-Infected and HIV-Uninfected Pregnant Women in a Malaria-Endemic Area of Rural Western Kenya

Study design: Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention

Primary outcome:

Proportion of women with an appropriate rise in Hemagglutination Inhibition (HI) titers

Proportion of infants born to standard dose (15 µg) QIV and double dose (30 µg) QIV recipients with HI titers greater than or equal to 40 in cord blood compared to same in controls.

Number of solicited and unsolicited adverse events post-vaccination by study arm

Secondary outcome:

Vaccine efficacy of standard dose (15 µg) QIV and double dose (30 µg) QIV in mothers and infants compared to control mothers and infants.

HIV infection and placental antibody transfer

Birth weight

Peripheral and placental parasitemia impact on vaccination

baseline polio immunity and polio antibody transfer

Detailed description: Recent investments in influenza surveillance in many African countries confirm results from other countries that young children, pregnant women, and those with chronic medical conditions are at increased risk of hospitalization and death from influenza infection. Annual influenza vaccination is the most effective method for preventing influenza virus infection and its complications. Vaccination is currently recommended in high risk groups in many developed countries and the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization made a recommendation for vaccination of pregnant women in their 2005 position paper on influenza vaccine. In 2012, the SAGE further concluded that pregnant women are the most important risk group for inactivated seasonal influenza vaccination based upon "compelling evidence of substantial risk of severe disease in this group and evidence that seasonal influenza vaccine is safe and effective in preventing disease in pregnant women as well as their young infants, in whom disease burden is also high". Maternal influenza immunization is viewed as the most effective way to protect infants less than 6 months of age who are not yet eligible for immunization. In the United States, children under 6 months experience very high rates of influenza-associated hospitalization and are among those most at risk of severe outcomes. Recent data from Kenya, similarly suggest rates of influenza-associated hospitalizations in children under age 1 to be as high, or higher, than those observed in the United States. Vaccination of pregnant women provides protection to their infants against laboratory-confirmed influenza illness in the first months of life. Furthermore, vaccination of pregnant women has been associated with a decreased risk of pre-term birth and small for gestational age in Canada and the state of Georgia in the US, and increased birth weight in infants during periods of high transmission in Bangladesh. However, traditional TIV may have reduced immunogenicity in HIV-infected adults, and HIV infection has been shown to reduce placental transfer of both tetanus and measles antibodies. The high prevalence of other diseases, including malaria and malnutrition, may also impact the effectiveness of influenza vaccination for pregnant women and their infants in sub-Saharan Africa. Use of double dose QIV may produce a greater immune response in pregnant women and increased antibody production may improve transplacental transfer of influenza antibodies to the developing fetus, conferring a better or possibly longer duration of protection from influenza infection. Therefore, we propose to conduct a randomized controlled trial of influenza vaccines in a high HIV-prevalence, malaria-endemic setting in Kenya, using inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) as a comparator/control. We propose to assess the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of standard dose (15 µg) QIV (FLUARIX® (GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Dresden, Germany) and double dose (30 µg) QIV in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected pregnant women. OBJECTIVES: 1. To evaluate the immunogenicity of standard dose (15 µg) QIV and double dose (30 µg) QIV in HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women 2. To evaluate the level of vaccine-induced influenza antibody transfer to infants of HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women who receive standard dose (15 µg) QIV or double dose (30 µg) QIV 3. To evaluate the safety of standard dose (15 µg) QIV and double dose (30 µg) QIV in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected pregnant women and fetus DESIGN: This trial will be conducted as a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial stratified by HIV status in up to 720 pregnant women in their second and third trimesters and their infants residing in health and demographic surveillance sites (HDSS) around Siaya District Hospital and Lwak Mission Hospital in Nyanza Province, Western Kenya. The study will be conducted in accordance with International Conference on Harmonization Good Clinical Practice (GCP) standards. Mothers must agree to be counseled and tested for HIV at the time of screening and enrollment unless there is written documentation of HIV infection or a negative HIV test in the last 3 months. After initial screening for eligibility and informed consent, enrolled women will be stratified by HIV status (infected, uninfected) and block randomized in a 1: 1:1: 1 ratio to receive standard dose (15 µg) QIV, double dose (30 µg) QIV or IPV. The day of vaccination will be considered study Day 0 for each subject. Each subject will receive a single vaccination. For the first 240 enrolled women, study personnel will visit their homes on Days 1, 2, and 3 to do active surveillance for adverse events following vaccination. Pregnancy outcomes will be recorded for all subjects (live birth, still birth, or spontaneous abortion). HIV testing will be repeated at birth for all women with negative results at screening. Live and still born infants will be examined by trained study personnel in the first 24 hours after delivery to determine birth weight, length, assess gestational age, and identify possible congenital anomalies associated with vaccination. All enrolled subjects will be asked to return to the antenatal study clinic on Study Day 7, Day 28, Day 56 (if not delivered), for delivery, and for any febrile or respiratory illness or other concern. During the enrollment process, their mobile telephone number will be recorded (or a number will be recorded for someone they identify in the village with a mobile telephone who will be willing to transmit information to them). Participants will be contacted by phone or in person every 2 weeks to determine if they have had fever and/or cough during the prior 2 weeks. Subjects with fever only will receive a malaria smear and other treatment as appropriate per Kenya Ministry of Health (MOH) guidelines. Subjects with fever or cough will have respiratory specimens collected via placement of NP/OP swabs by trained clinical personnel for influenza testing. After delivery, subjects will be asked to bring infants to the study clinic for evaluation on Days 7, 42, and 70 of life and when the child is approximately 6 months of age. Infants will also be under surveillance for fever, history of fever, hypothermia and/or cough for the first 6 months of life. All febrile, hypothermic, and/or coughing infants will receive testing for malaria and nasopharyngeal (NP)and oropharyngeal (OP) swabs for influenza. Febrile infants under 2 months of age will receive additional testing and treatment per national guidelines. Any infant admitted to the hospital with any respiratory symptom, hypothermia, apnea or fever will receive testing for influenza by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) of NP/OP specimens. Vaccine immunogenicity will be evaluated by comparing hemagglutination inhibition (HI) titers on Day 0 and Day 28 and at delivery in the mother, in cord blood, in the mother and infant at infant Day 70 of life, and in the infant at approximately 6 months of age. We will determine the proportion of vaccinated women who achieve a fourfold rise in HI titers post-vaccination compared to pre-vaccination or an HI titer ≥40 for subjects with baseline HI titer <10, compared to the same outcome in controls. The proportion of HI titers ≥40 in cord blood and in infants will also be measured and compared among vaccine recipients and controls. Geometric means of HI titers will also be compared.

Eligibility

Minimum age: 13 Years. Maximum age: 49 Years. Gender(s): Female.

Criteria:

Inclusion Criteria: 1. Resident of HDSS village 2. Singleton pregnancy 3. Second or third trimester (after quickening) but before 33 weeks of gestation by fundal height 4. Does not plan to relocate out of the HDSS area or population-based surveillance site in the next 12 months and agrees to all follow-up visits/contact by phone 5. Is not currently enrolled in another intervention study 6. Provides informed consent by signature or thumb print 7. Consents to HIV testing and counseling as required 8. Willing to deliver in the labor ward of the study hospital 9. No history of chronic illness requiring multiple hospitalizations or prolonged medical therapy (except HIV on ART) Exclusion Criteria: 1. History of allergic reaction to any component of the study vaccines 2. Residence outside the study area or planning to relocate out in the 9 months following enrollment 3. Received immunoglobulin or blood products within 45 days of study entry 4. Used immunosuppressive medication within 45 days of study entry (inhaled and topical corticosteroids permitted) 5. High risk pregnancy including any pre-existing condition likely to cause complications of pregnancy (hypertension, diabetes, current asthma, eclampsia or pre-eclampsia, epilepsy, heart disease, renal disease, liver disease, fistula repair, leg or spine deformity) 6. Unable to give informed consent (for example due to mental disability) 7. Previous enrollment in a study with similar interventions 8. Gestational age >32 weeks by last menstrual period or fundal height 9. Acutely ill with temperature ≥37. 5°C on the day of randomization/vaccination 10. Hemoglobin <7. 0 g/dL 11. Influenza vaccination in previous 12 months

Locations and Contacts

Siaya District Hospital, Siaya, Kenya
Additional Information

Starting date: April 2014
Last updated: April 8, 2014

Page last updated: August 20, 2015

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