The aim of the study is to evaluate simultaneously the immunological and clinical efficacy and tolerability of an influenza vaccine, inactivated, quadrivalent, with cleaved virus, in patients at risk for severe and complicated influenza routinely vaccinated against influenza in family medicine clinics or specialty clinics (pediatric, internal medicine, cardiology, gynecological diabetes, pregnant women, transplant).
Influenza has been called the last uncontrollable scourge of mankind because of its epidemic and pandemic potential. According to WHO estimates, 5-10% of the adult population and 10-20% of children globally fall ill with influenza seasonally. Influenza incidence has implications for individual patients (risk of complications, hospitalization, disability and death), as well as for public health (increased outpatient consultations, hospitalizations, including in intensive care units, increased absenteeism from work). Groups at risk for post-influenza complications include children under the age of 5, seniors over 65, patients with chronic diseases such as respiratory, cardiovascular, metabolic conditions, obesity, immunosuppressive treatment, and pregnant women, among others. Since the influenza A H1N1pdm09 pandemic, the WHO has particularly emphasized the need to vaccinate patients at risk of severe and complicated influenza, and has recommended a tetravalent vaccine since 2013. The inactivated tetravalent influenza vaccine has been available in Poland since the 2016/17 season, and also registered for children since the 2018/19 season. This is also in line with current Polish recommendations issued by the National Influenza Control Program. With the extremely low level of vaccination against influenza of the Polish population (about 3.7%), the threat of an influenza epidemic is serious. The number of reports describing simultaneously the immunological and clinical efficacy and tolerance of influenza vaccination of the Polish population is limited, the published works usually focus on the evaluation of either immunogenicity or clinical efficacy, there is a lack of publications comprehensively determining the effectiveness of the vaccine in the Polish homogeneous population, especially people in the above-mentioned risk groups, as well as the determination of the occurrence of the phenomenon of non-immunogenicity of the vaccine in the Polish population. An important aspect in the situation of low immunogenicity of the Polish population is the aspect of persistence of protective antibody levels at the beginning of the next flu season. Few works indicate the persistence of protective antibody levels in healthy individuals without risk factors for immune disorders, but the quality of "immune memory" after influenza vaccination in patients at risk of severe and complicated influenza is still insufficiently understood. The aim of the study is to evaluate simultaneously the immunological and clinical efficacy and tolerability of an influenza vaccine, inactivated, quadrivalent, with cleaved virus, in patients at risk for severe and complicated influenza routinely vaccinated against influenza in family medicine clinics or specialty clinics (pediatric, internal medicine, cardiology, gynecological diabetes, pregnant women, transplant).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,500
Evaluation of immunogenicity and tolerance of quadrivalent influenza vaccine in groups at risk of severe influenza, including obese adults, as well as in pregnant women (with assesment of antibodies in cord blood).
Department of Social Medicine and Public Health, Medical University of Warsaw
Warsaw, Poland
influenza vaccine immunogenicity, seroconversion and seroprotection
Immunogenicity is assessed using a hemagglutinin inhibition test. Percentage of patients with influenza antibody titers of 1:40 or more after vaccination. Seroconversion rate-a fourfold increase in the geometric mean titer after vaccination and the percentage of newborns with antibody titers of 1:40 or more at birth. Seroconversion and seroprotection were compared against the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. Transplacental transfer of antibodies was compared according to whether or not the patient had been vaccinated in previous seasons (applies only to the study on pregnant women.
Time frame: 4-8 weeks after vaccination
assessment of vaccination tolerance
Each patient will keep a diary of symptoms of adverse events occurring after vaccination and after 4 weeks will be asked to complete a survey (the survey was created in accordance with the Summary of Product Characteristics, CPMP and International Committee for Harmonization guidelines for the management of clinical safety data: definitions and standards for accelerated reporting).
Time frame: 30 days after vaccination
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