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VAccination to Improve Clinical outComes in Heart Failure Trial (VACC-HeFT): a Feasibility Study
A multi-center, prospective, randomized, open-label blinded-endpoint trial in patients with heart failure will be conducted; 20 will be assigned to the standard dose vaccine dose and 20 patients to high dose influenza vaccine. Post-vaccine antibody measurements will be assessed, as well as tolerability differences between groups.
This is a randomized, double blind, active-control trial of high dose influenza vaccine compared to standard dose influenza vaccine for one season in adult participants with symptomatic heart failure(HF). The primary outcome measure is humoral (antibody-mediated) immune response, and secondary outcomes include cumulative incidence of influenza-like illness symptoms and all cause hospitalizations. The aim is to gather information on feasibility of this study design and effect size differences to inform a larger outcomes-based clinical trial. The 5.8 million Individuals in the US with heart HF are at high risk for influenza infection and associated morbidity, mortality and increased health care costs despite annual influenza vaccination. Higher dose of vaccine is approved for use in older adults. Antibody-mediated immunity contributes to vaccine-induced protection from influenza illness. Investigators at University of Wisconsin(UW) Madison have demonstrated reduced antibody titers to influenza vaccination in patients with HF. Additionally, study team has shown in a pilot study that double dose influenza vaccine resulted in increased titers and was well tolerated. A multi-center, prospective, randomized, open-label blinded-endpoint trial will be conducted with 20 participants assigned to the standard dose vaccine dose and 20 participants to high dose influenza vaccine. The primary outcome measure is the rate of seroconversion (4-fold rise in antibody titers to A/H3N2, A/H1N1, and B-type vaccine antigens), assessed 4 weeks post vaccination. The study will also examine feasibility differences in symptoms of influenza and all-cause hospitalizations between vaccine dose groups, and these data will be used for planning a subsequent outcomes-based clinical trial.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
Start Date
September 1, 2014
Primary Completion Date
January 1, 2016
Completion Date
May 1, 2016
Last Updated
June 9, 2021
48
ACTUAL participants
Influenza vaccine
BIOLOGICAL
Lead Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
NCT06019169
NCT07325942
NCT05934565
Data Source & Attribution
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