Actively Recruiting
High vs. Standard Dose Influenza Vaccines in Lung Transplant (Repeater)
Led by Vanderbilt University Medical Center · Updated on 2025-10-07
60
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
219 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
This will be a follow-up study to the "Comparison of High Dose vs. Standard Dose Influenza Vaccine in Lung Allograft Recipient" study (DMID Protocol Number 22-0014) at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Lung transplantation is a life-saving therapy for patients with advanced lung disease, and is also associated with an improvement in quality of life. However, due to the need for life-long immunosuppression to prevent acute cellular rejection and chronic lung allograft dysfunction ("chronic rejection"), lung transplant recipients are at risk for developing major infections. In fact, one-year survival is 85%, with infection being the leading cause of death within the first year post-transplant. We will conduct a follow-up phase II, randomized, double-blind trial to assess the impact of subsequent administration of two doses of HD-IIV compared to two doses of SD-IIV among lung recipients during the early post-transplant period. Demonstration of improved immunogenicity from two doses of HD-IIV over consecutive influenza seasons would provide potential broad benefit in reducing influenza disease and its associated complications in lung transplant recipients. Moreover, studying vaccine immunogenicity and safety in the same participants over consecutive years can provide insight into the influence of immunosuppression levels and allograft aging on vaccine-mediated immune modulation. This proposed study design will contribute significantly to influenza vaccination guidance and policy for the highly vulnerable lung transplant population. This proposed study is designed to address several key knowledge gaps in vaccine-mediated protection of lung transplant recipients against influenza: * Is there increased immunogenicity with administration of one or two doses of HD-IIV or SD-IIV in the subsequent season compared to two doses of HD-IIV or SD-IIV in the first season? * What is the durability of the humoral and cellular immune response between influenza seasons and does two doses of HD-IIV or SD-IIV sustain higher HAI titers compared to two doses of HD-IIV or SD-IIV in the first season? * What is the impact of maintenance immunosuppression levels on influenza vaccine immunogenicity within the same participant? * Will the optimal immunogenic vaccination strategy be associated with an acceptable long-term safety profile over successive influenza seasons, including injection-site and systemic reactions, allosensitization, and organ rejection?
CONDITIONS
Official Title
High vs. Standard Dose Influenza Vaccines in Lung Transplant (Repeater)
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Lung transplant recipient who completed all visits of the prior influenza vaccine study (DMID protocol number 22-0014) during the 2024-2025 or 2025-2026 influenza season
- Anticipated availability for the entire duration of this follow-up study
- Ability to be contacted by telephone, text message, email, or electronic health record messaging
You will not qualify if you...
- Recipient of multi-organ, extra-pulmonary, or hematopoietic stem cell transplant
- Recipient of a re-do lung transplant
- History of Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Received current season's influenza vaccine before enrollment or visit 1 of this follow-up study
- Pregnant person
- Laboratory-confirmed influenza after September 1st of the current season and before enrollment
- Received CMVIG, IVIG, or SCIG within 28 days of each vaccine dose
- Received rituximab or other B-cell depleting therapy within 3 months before first vaccine dose
- Received T-cell depleting therapies between completion of prior study visit and enrollment
- Investigator concern about participation
- Temporary delays for fever (≥100.4ºF/38.0ºC) or acute severe illness within 48 hours before enrollment
- Receipt of live vaccines within 4 weeks or inactivated vaccines within 2 weeks before vaccination
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States, 37232
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
N
Natahsa Halasa, MD, MPH
CONTACT
S
Shari D. Barto
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
PREVENTION
Number of Arms
2
Not the Right Trial for You?
Explore thousands of other clinical trials that might be a better match.
Sign up to get personalized trial recommendations delivered to your inbox.
Already have an account? Log in here