Dengue fever, caused by dengue viruses, is a major health problem in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of and immune response to a 2-dose regimen of a new monovalent dengue virus vaccine. This study will test the dengue virus vaccine DEN1delta30 in healthy adults.
Dengue viruses account for more than 50 million cases of dengue fever and one half million cases annually of dengue hemorrhagic fever/shock syndrome. Dengue virus infections can cause illness ranging from mild, self-limited febrile illness to life threatening diseases. The goal of dengue vaccine development is to induce a long-lived antibody response against all four dengue serotypes. The rDEN1delta30 vaccine is a live attenuated dengue virus vaccine that may be protective against dengue serotype 1 (DEN1). The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of a 2-dose regimen of rDEN1delta30 dengue virus vaccine. The regimen will differ in when the second booster shot of the vaccine is given. This study will last 162 days (about 23 weeks) for those participants in Cohort 1, and 222 days (about 32 weeks) for those in Cohort 2. Participants in Cohort 1 will be randomly assigned to receive rDEN1delta30 vaccine or placebo on Study Day 0 and Study Day 120. Participants in Cohort 2 will be randomly assigned to receive rDEN1delta30 vaccine or placebo on Study Day 0 and Study Day 180. There will be a total of 25 visits for each cohort. For both cohorts, the first and second vaccination days will include a physical exam and blood and urine collection, vital signs measurements, and receipt of the vaccine. A 30 minute observation period will follow vaccination. Participants will take their temperature at home three times a day for the first 16 days and report it in a diary. At all other study visits, vital signs measurements, a physical exam, and blood and/or urine collection will occur. At selected study visits, participants will turn in their diary cards. Some participants may be asked to join an optional skin biopsy substudy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
60
Live attenuated rDEN1delta30 vaccine at a dose of 10\^3 PFU
Placebo for rDEN1delta30
Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
To determine the safety and immunogenicity of a two-dose regimen of the rDEN1delta30 vaccine given as two doses separated by four or six months
Time frame: Throughout study
To determine the optimum interval between first and second dose of rDEN1delta30 vaccine, as assessed by neutralizing antibody response to DEN1 induced by the vaccine
Time frame: At 4 and 6 weeks after first and second vaccination
To assess the frequency, quantity, and duration of viremia following each vaccine dose, based on the mean peak viremia, mean day of onset, and mean duration of viremia
Time frame: Throughout study
To determine the number of vaccinees infected with rDEN1delta30 virus
Time frame: Throughout study
To compare the infectivity rates, safety, and immunogenicity between dose 1 and 2 within a cohort and between cohorts
Time frame: Throughout study
To evaluate the immunopathological mechanism of vaccine-associated rash in participants willing to undergo skin biopsy
Time frame: Throughout study
To evaluate the phenotype and activation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) at primary infection and challenge with DEN1
Time frame: Throughout study
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