New York, May 16 (SocialNews.XYZ) A team of researchers at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) has rolled out a clinical trial of an experimental mRNA-based universal influenza vaccine.
The Phase 1 trial will test the experimental vaccine, known as H1ssF-3928 mRNA-LNP, for safety and its ability to induce an immune response.
The vaccine uses a specific portion of a flu protein, hemagglutinin (HA), to induce a broad immune response against influenza. While one portion of the HA protein, known as the head, tends to change as the flu virus spreads and evolves, a more stable portion, known as the stem, evolves very slowly and is very similar across many different types of the flu virus.
By using the HA stem as the basis for a vaccine, researchers hope to induce long-term immunity against a broad range of flu viruses. Unlike the earlier vaccine, the H1ssF-3928 mRNA-LNP vaccine candidate uses a messenger RNA (mRNA) platform.
An effective universal flu vaccine could protect people against a wide variety of strains and ideally provide durable long-term immunity, so people would not need to be vaccinated every year.
"A universal influenza vaccine would be a major public health achievement and could eliminate the need for both annual development of seasonal influenza vaccines, as well as the need for patients to get a flu shot each year,: said Hugh Auchincloss, acting Director at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases' (NIAID), part of the NIH.
"Moreover, some strains of influenza virus have significant pandemic potential. A universal flu vaccine could serve as an important line of defence against the spread of a future flu pandemic," he added.
The trail will enrol up to 50 healthy volunteers aged 18 to 49.
Three groups of study participants (10 participants each) will be vaccinated with 10, 25, and 50 microgrammes of the experimental vaccine, respectively. After evaluation of the data to determine an optimum dosage, an additional 10 participants will be enrolled to receive the optimum dosage.
The study also will include a group of participants who will receive a current quadrivalent seasonal influenza vaccine. This will allow the researchers a point of direct comparison between the immunogenicity and safety of the candidate vaccine and available seasonal flu vaccines.
Participants will be regularly evaluated to assess the vaccine's safety (and, secondarily, its efficacy) and will receive follow-up appointments for up to one year after vaccination.
Seasonal influenza, or flu, kills thousands of people in the US each year. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that between 2010 and 2020, between 12,000 and 52,000 people died of flu in the US annually.
Although annual seasonal flu vaccines are valuable tools in controlling the spread and severity of influenza, they do not provide immunity against every flu strain.
Source: IANS
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