Introduction. The increase in the incidence of whooping cough in children and adults of different age groups justifies the need for their revaccination and the development of new, acceptable for these purposes. This work is devoted to substantiating the design of a clinical trial and describing the results of a comparative study of the safety and tolerability of the drug "GamLPV" with two-fold intranasal administration to healthy adult volunteers using two methods. The choice of the scheme and method of administration of the drug is justified. The serological structure of the population of adults aged 18–40 years living in Moscow and the Moscow region is characterized.Aim. Determination of the safety and tolerability of the drug with a double intranasal administration of the vaccine by drip method and spraying through an actuator.Materials and methods. A randomized placebo-controlled trial included 50 healthy male and female volunteers aged 18 to 40 years who met the inclusion criteria. The volunteers were divided into 2 groups of 25 people: a drip method of administration and spraying through an "actuator". By both methods, the drug was administered twice with an interval of 60 days.Results and discussion. Serological analysis of the population of healthy volunteers at the prescreening stage justified the inclusion in the study of volunteers containing anti-pertussis antibodies in the blood (IgG ≤40 Ed/ml). A comparison of the results of preclinical studies on an experimental model of non-human monkeys and the first phase of a clinical study of GamLPV allowed us to propose two methods of double administration of the drug as a promising vaccination scheme for volunteers. A comparative randomized study shows the safety of using the proposed scheme for vaccination of adult volunteers.Conclusions. Both proposed methods of double administration can be used to plan a multicenter study to research the immunogenicity and protective activity of GamLPV.
Introduction. A significant increase in the incidence of pertussis in the world, including among adolescents and adults, the prevalence of mild forms of the disease and asymptomatic carrier of bacteria B. pertussis, and the resulting need for mass revaccination of different age groups determine the demand for new vaccines against B. pertussis. In N.F. Gamaleya Federal Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology, a live intranasal pertussis vaccine for the prevention of pertussis (GamLPV) has been developed. The GamLPV vaccine underwent preclinical studies that proved its safety and effectiveness in experiments on small laboratory animals and nonhuman monkeys. Safety of vaccine is shown in clinical studies on healthy volunteers.The aim of the study is to assess the immunogenicity of different doses of the drug GamLPV when first used in healthy volunteers.Materials and methods. The study was conducted as randomized placebo-controlled, blind trial with consistent volunteer inclusion and dose escalation. Study ID in clinicaltrials.gov database: NCT03137927 (A Phase I Clinical Study of a GamLPV, a Live Intranasal Bordetella Pertussis Vaccine). The following parameters of humoral and cellular immune responses were assessed in dynamics: levels of specific IgM, IgG and IgA antibodies in blood serum of volunteers and the number of cytokines interleukin-17, tumor necrosis factor-α, interferon-γ produced after specific induction in vitro of blood mononuclears of vaccinated volunteers. Dynamics of attenuated bacteria persistence in nasopharynx of vaccinated volunteers was evaluated.Results. Intranasal vaccination of volunteers with the drug Gam LPV resulted in the formation of a specific humoral (IgG and IgA) and cellular immune response. The dose-dependent nature of immunoglobulin and cytokine production was shown. Attenuated bacteria persisted for a long time in the nose/oropharynx of vaccinated volunteers.Discussion. Good tolerability of all tested doses of the drug justifies the choice for further investigation of a vaccine dose equal to 4 × 109 CFU. At the next stage, the safety and immunogenicity of two-time vaccination of volunteers will be studied.
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