A/CALIFORNIA/7/2009 (H1N1)PDM09-DERIVED STRAIN USED (NYMC X-181)

Clinical trials investigating A/CALIFORNIA/7/2009 (H1N1)PDM09-DERIVED STRAIN USED (NYMC X-181) are looking at influenza immune responses after vaccination. The main goal is to measure safety-related study outcomes and, especially, how well the immune system responds in health care personnel and other eligible adults.

Table of contents

Overview of the trial

The trial record for A/CALIFORNIA/7/2009 (H1N1)PDM09-DERIVED STRAIN USED (NYMC X-181) describes a study of immune responses to influenza after vaccination.[1] The purpose was to assess antibodies against influenza virus strains from the current season, past seasons, and strains that were circulating in the community.[1]

Who was studied

The target population was health care personnel.[1] This means the study focused on people working in health care settings, rather than a broad general population.[1]

Study design and phase

This was an interventional study, meaning researchers gave a study intervention and then measured its effect.[1] The trial was in Phase 3, which is a later stage of testing in a larger group of participants.[1]

What the trial measured

The main outcome was humoral immunity, which is the antibody response found in blood serum samples.[1] Researchers assessed this using traditional hemagglutination inhibition testing, and they could also use microneutralization or neutralization tests.[1]

The brief summary also says the study aimed to measure the presence and titer, or amount, of antibodies before and after vaccination.[1] This helps show whether the immune response changed after the vaccine-related intervention.[1]

Trial status and size

The trial status is completed, so the planned study work has already finished.[1] The enrollment was 1,500 participants, which shows that this was a large study for measuring influenza immune responses.[1]

Key terms explained

Antibodies are proteins made by the immune system to recognize and help fight infection.[1] Serum is the liquid part of blood used for laboratory testing.[1] Titer means the amount of a substance, here the level of antibodies measured in the sample.[1]

Hemagglutination inhibition is a lab test used to see how well antibodies block influenza viruses from causing red blood cells to clump together.[1] Microneutralization and neutralization tests are other lab methods that check whether antibodies can stop the virus from infecting cells.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT03323112 Phase 3 Influenza, immunity against influenza Completed 1500

Sperimentazioni cliniche in corso su A/CALIFORNIA/7/2009 (H1N1)PDM09-DERIVED STRAIN USED (NYMC X-181)

  • Studio sull’Immunità all’Influenza nei Professionisti Sanitari: Vaccino con Polysorbato 80, Sodio Citrato, Acido Citrico Anidro e Combinazione di Farmaci

    Arruolamento concluso

    1 1 1 1
    Malattie in studio:
    Finlandia

Glossario

  • Influenza: A viral infection commonly called the flu. Trials in this data set focus on immune responses against influenza strains.
  • Immunity against influenza: The body's ability to defend itself against influenza infection, often measured by antibodies after vaccination.
  • Health care personnel: People who work in health care settings, such as hospitals or clinics. This is the main study population in the trial.
  • Phase 3: A later stage of clinical research with a larger group of participants. It helps researchers understand how a study intervention performs in real-world use.
  • Interventional study: A trial in which researchers give a study intervention and then measure its effects.
  • Humoral immunity: The antibody-based part of the immune response. In this trial, it is measured in blood serum samples.
  • Serum sample: A blood sample used for testing antibodies and other substances.
  • Hemagglutination inhibition (HI): A laboratory test used to measure antibodies against influenza viruses.
  • Microneutralization test (NT): A test that checks whether antibodies can block a virus from infecting cells.
  • Neutralization test: A laboratory method used to see if antibodies can stop a virus from causing infection in test systems.
  • Circulating influenza strains: Influenza strains that are currently spreading in the community.

Riferimenti

  1. https://studi-clinici.it/studio/studio-sullimmunita-allinfluenza-nei-professionisti-sanitari-vaccino-con-polysorbato-80-sodio-citrato-acido-citrico-anidro-e-combinazione-di-farmaci/