Comparison of High vs. Standard Dose Influenza Vaccine in Pediatric Solid Organ Transplant Recipients
Project Number5U01AI167799-02
Former Number1U01AI167799-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderHALASA, NATASHA BASSAM Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationVANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
Influenza virus is a significant pathogen in pediatric solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients. However, these
individuals respond poorly to standard-dose (SD) inactivated influenza vaccine (IIV). Recent studies have
investigated two strategies to overcome poor immune responses in SOT recipients: (1) administration of high-
dose (HD)-IIV compared to SD-IIV and (2) two doses of SD-IIV compared to one dose of SD-IIV in the same
influenza season. One study compared HD-IIV vs. SD-IIV in adult SOT recipients and noted that HD-IIV was
safe and more immunogenic; however, the median post-transplant period was 38 months. A phase I pediatric
study comparing a single dose of HD-IIV vs. SD-IIV was safe with higher immunogenicity, but the study was
limited by small sample size and median post-transplant vaccine administration was 26 months. In another
phase II trial of adult SOT recipients, two doses of SD-IIV one month apart compared to one-dose of SD-IIV
revealed modestly increased immunogenicity when given at a median of 18 months post-transplant. Therefore,
these studies lack both evaluation in the early post-transplant period and substantive pediatric populations.
Additionally, the administration of two-doses of HD-IIV in the same influenza season has not been evaluated in
pediatric SOT recipients. Thus, the optimal immunization strategy for pediatric SOT recipients less than 24
months post-transplant is unknown. In addition, immunologic predictors and correlates of influenza vaccine
immunogenicity in pediatric SOT recipients have not been well-defined. The central hypothesis of our
proposal is that pediatric SOT recipients 1-23 months post-transplant who receive two doses of HD-
quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (QIV) will have similar safety but higher HAI geometric mean
titers (GMTs) to influenza antigens compared to pediatric SOT recipients receiving two doses of SD-
QIV. To test this hypothesis and address the critical knowledge gaps outlined above, we propose to conduct a
phase II, multi-center, randomized-controlled immunogenicity and safety trial comparing two doses of HD-QIV
to two doses of SD-QIV in pediatric kidney, heart, and/or liver SOT recipients 1-23 months post-transplant. The
results of this study will address significant knowledge gaps regarding influenza vaccine strategies and
immune responses in pediatric SOT recipients and will guide vaccine recommendations in the early post-
transplant period.
Public Health Relevance Statement
NARRATIVE
Influenza virus is a significant pathogen in pediatric solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients, but these
individuals respond poorly to standard-dose (SD) inactivated influenza vaccine (IIV). Studies suggest that two
doses of SD-IIV or one dose of high-dose (HD-IIV) is superior to one dose of SD-IIV; however, this has not
been tested in the highest risk early post-transplantation period, and pediatric-specific studies of these
regimens and their impact are critically lacking. This study aims to compare two doses of HD-IIV to two doses
of SD-IIV administered in the same influenza season in pediatric kidney, heart, and/or liver SOT recipients in
the early post-transplant period.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AcheAcuteAddressAdultAdverse eventAntibodiesAntibody titer measurementAntigensB-Lymphocyte SubsetsB-LymphocytesBiological AssayBiopsyCD4 Positive T LymphocytesCellular AssayChildChildhoodClinicalCytometryDataDevelopmentDoseDouble-Blind MethodEnrollmentEvaluationFatigueFeverFrequenciesHLA AntigensHeadacheHeartHemagglutinationHospitalizationImmuneImmune responseImmunologicsImmunophenotypingImpairmentIndividualIndurationInfluenzaInfluenza A virusInfluenza B VirusInfluenza vaccinationInjectionsKidneyKnowledgeLiverMalaiseMeasuresMyalgiaNauseaOrgan TransplantationPainPhasePhenotypePopulationPrevention strategyPrimary PreventionRandomizedReactionRecommendationRecording of previous eventsRednessRegimenSafetySample SizeSeasonsSerumSeveritiesSiteSolidSwellingT-Cell ActivationT-LymphocyteTestingVaccinationVaccine AntigenVaccinesVomitingdesignexhaustionhigh riskimmune activationimmunogenicimmunogenicityinfluenza infectioninfluenza virus vaccineinfluenzavirusorgan transplant recipientpathogenphase 1 studyphase II trialpost-transplantprimary endpointresponseseasonal influenzasenescencestandard measuretrial comparingvaccination strategyvaccine immunogenicityvaccine strategyvaccine trial
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
CFDA Code
855
DUNS Number
079917897
UEI
GYLUH9UXHDX5
Project Start Date
09-June-2023
Project End Date
31-March-2028
Budget Start Date
01-April-2024
Budget End Date
31-March-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$1,669,617
Direct Costs
$1,012,788
Indirect Costs
$656,829
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
$1,669,617
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
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