Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02215863

Immunogenicity and Safety of PCV13 and Fluad in Adults Aged ≥60 Years

Immunogenicity and Safety of 13-valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine (PCV13) and MF59-adjuvanted Influenza Vaccine (Fluad) After Concomitant Vaccination in Adults Aged ≥60 Years

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,195 (actual)
Sponsor
Korea University Guro Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Recent reviews have highlighted the unpredictability and complexity of immune interference when multivalent conjugate vaccines are co-administered with other pediatric vaccines. It has become evident that the likelihood of immune interference (in response to conjugated- or co-administered antigens) increases in proportional to the number of glyco-conjugates (valencies) and dosages of carrier proteins. There are many kinds of carrier proteins: tetanus toxoid (TT), diphtheria toxoid (DT), CRM197 (non-toxic variant of DT), OMP (complex outer-membrane protein mixture from Neisseria meningitidis) and non-typeable Hemophilus influenza-derived protein D. Among them, TT is a more potent inducer of T-helper immunity, but carrier-induced-epitopic suppression (dose-dependent carrier antibody and carrier B cell dominance) may occur with TT. In comparison, DT and CRM197 are weaker B-cell immunogens, but apparently trigger more T-regulatory mechanism. Recent pediatric studies of PCV13 co-administered with DTaP vaccines showed 6B GMT (geometric mean titer) to be somewhat reduced compared to the results with PCV13 alone. Similar to children, adults frequently visit outpatient clinics to get two or more kinds of vaccines at the same time: pneumococcal vaccine, influenza vaccine, Td (diphtheria and tetanus) vaccine, HPV (human papilloma virus) vaccine, meningococcal vaccine, zoster vaccine, etc. PCV13 has limited co-administration information for adjuvanted influenza vaccine. This study is designed to evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of PCV13 and MF59-adjuvanted influenza vaccine (Fluad) after concomitant administration in adults aged 60 years or older.

Detailed description

This study is a multi-centered, randomized controlled clinical trial: Korea University Guro Hospital, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Hallym University Gangnam Sacred Hospital and Catholic University Medical College, St. Vincent's Hospital. The primary objective is to evaluate the immunogenicity of Fluad after concomitant administration of Fluad and PCV13 in adults aged 60 years or more. This study is designed to demonstrate non-inferiority of sero-conversion rate after Fluad vaccination: Fluad-PCV13 co-administration group versus Fluad alone group The secondary objective is to evaluate the immunogenicity of PCV13 after concomitant administration in adults aged 60 years or more. This study is designed to demonstrate non-inferiority of PCV13 when co-administered with Fluad compared with PCV13 alone. This study is also designed to evaluate the safety of concomitant PCV13-Fluad administration in adults aged 60 years or more. All the participants will be followed for the duration of an expected average of 4 weeks after vaccination.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALFluad and Prevenar13
BIOLOGICALFluad
BIOLOGICALPrevenar13

Timeline

Start date
2014-09-01
Primary completion
2015-03-01
Completion
2015-03-01
First posted
2014-08-13
Last updated
2015-04-01

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: South Korea

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02215863. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.