This study will evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of inactivated H1N1 swine-origin monovalent influenza vaccine in immunocompromised children and young adults.
This is a prospective observational study. This study will not dictate vaccine administration, nor the vaccine product to be used. It will collect data in St Jude patients who will receive the vaccine as part of their clinical care per institutional guidelines. Research participants will receive two doses of inactivated H1N1 swine-origin monovalent influenza vaccine administered 28 days apart as part of clinical care. Each dose contains 15 mcg of hemagglutinin antigen (HA).Follow-up visits will be scheduled 28 days after each dose and at day 208+/- 14 days for blood work. The day of administration of the first vaccine dose is counted as day 0. At each of these visits, blood will be collected to assess for immunogenicity. Research participants will be given a diary card to record symptoms for 28 days . They will be asked to bring this diary back at the next visit. Other vaccine-related adverse events will also be collected by retrospective chart review. Children and young adults between the ages of 6 months and 21 years and 13 kg or greater in body weight who have an underlying diagnosis of cancer, HIV, sickle cell disease or receipt of a stem cell transplant more than a year prior to study entry and who will receive inactivated H1N1 swine-origin monovalent influenza vaccine in the winter/fall of 2009-2010 as part of their routine clinical care.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
104
St.Jude Children's Research Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
This study will document Seroprotection (a post-vaccine antibody response ≥ an HI titer of 1:40).
Time frame: 1.5 years
This study will document seroconversion rates (a 4-fold or greater rise in HI titer comparing pre- and post-vaccine sera).
Time frame: 1.5 years
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