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RecruitingNCT06381739

A Trial of a Next Generation COVID-19 Vaccine Delivered by Inhaled Aerosol

A Phase 2 Trial to Evaluate Safety and Immunogenicity of a Next-generation COVID-19 Vaccine Delivered by Inhaled Aerosol to Humans

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
350 (estimated)
Sponsor
McMaster University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to study the safety of a new inhaled vaccine to prevent COVID infection and learn about the immune responses that are made in the lungs and the blood after vaccination. Participants will be randomized (like the toss of a coin) to receive the experimental vaccine or a placebo (a look-alike solution that contains no vaccine). To be in the study participants will have to have already had three doses of a messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) COVID vaccine and be generally healthy. Participants are given a single dose of the vaccine by breathing in a fine mist that goes directly into the lungs. During follow-up participants will: * visit the clinic for checkups and blood tests at 2, 4 and 8 weeks after vaccination * report their symptoms for 24 weeks after getting the vaccine. In some participants, the researchers will collect cells from the lung 4 weeks after vaccination (a test known as a bronchoscopy).

Detailed description

The global impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic remains profound; COVID-19 continues to be one of the leading causes of death and hospitalization due to infectious disease, disproportionately affecting the elderly and immunocompromised. The continuous evolution of the virus has significantly challenged the effectiveness of first-generation and updated vaccination strategies. These variants of concern (VOCs) can evade neutralizing antibodies. Adequate and early lung mucosal immunity is critical for control of infection but current vaccines fail to induce robust mucosal immunity in the lungs, a major reason for the high rates of break-through infections. The respiratory mucosal route of immunization, however, can induce protective respiratory mucosal immunity consisting of trained innate immunity (via memory airway macrophages), mucosal antibodies, and tissue-resident memory CD4+/CD8+ T cells. A phase 1 study has been completed using a recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus (ChAd) vector, ChAd-CoV3/Mac in 23 healthy volunteers and has shown that the vaccine can be safely administered by aerosol and that immune responses against COVID-19 develop in the lung and T-cells and neutralizing antibodies are generated in the blood. The purpose of this placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial is to determine if this new COVID-19 vaccine, ChAd-triCoV/Mac, is safe to give by aerosol to people who have been vaccinated with at least three doses of a COVID mRNA vaccine and evaluate the immune responses generated. Specifically, the researchers want to see if T cell responses and antibody responses to the COVID virus proteins develop in the blood after receiving the vaccine. There is a lack of surrogate immune markers for vaccine-induced protection against antibody-evading VOCs of SARS-CoV-2. However, given the now recognized importance of respiratory mucosal T cell immunity in anti-SARS-CoV-2 host defense, this study will allow for a correlation of mucosal T cell immunity with the T cells in blood to help predict vaccine efficacy, and inform the design of phase 3 efficacy studies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALChAd-triCoV/MacClinical-grade, fully certified ChAd-triCoV/Mac produced according to current Good Manufacturing Principles (cGMP) will be provided. A single dose of ChAd-triCoV/Mac diluted in 0.5mL formulated buffer will be aerosolized and inhaled via a mouthpiece and tidal breathing over approximately 2 minutes using the AeroNeb Solo Mesh Nebulizer.
OTHERControlA single dose of placebo (0.5mL formulated buffer) will be aerosolized and inhaled as the intervention vaccine.

Timeline

Start date
2025-03-25
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2027-01-01
First posted
2024-04-24
Last updated
2026-01-26

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06381739. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.