Characterisation of a wild-type influenza (A/H1N1) virus strain as an experimental challenge agent in humans

BACKGROUND: Human challenge models using respiratory viruses such as influenza are increasingly utilised in the development of novel vaccines and anti-viral modalities and can provide preliminary evidence of protection before evaluation in field trials. We describe the results of a clinical study ch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virology journal 2015-02, Vol.12 (1), p.13-13, Article 13
Hauptverfasser: Watson, Jeannette M, Francis, James N, Mesens, Sofie, Faiman, Gabriel A, Makin, Jill, Patriarca, Peter, Treanor, John J, Georges, Bertrand, Bunce, Campbell J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND: Human challenge models using respiratory viruses such as influenza are increasingly utilised in the development of novel vaccines and anti-viral modalities and can provide preliminary evidence of protection before evaluation in field trials. We describe the results of a clinical study characterising an A/H1N1 influenza challenge virus in humans. METHODS: The challenge agent, influenza A/California/2009 (H1N1), was manufactured under cGMP conditions and characterised in accordance with regulatory guidelines. A dose-ascending open-label clinical study was conducted in 29 healthy young adults screened sero-negative to the challenge strain. Subjects were intranasally inoculated with three increasing doses of virus and physician-reported signs, subjected-reported symptoms, viral shedding and immunological responses were monitored. RESULTS: A dose-dependent increase in clinical signs and symptoms was observed with 75% of subjects developing laboratory-confirmed illness at the highest inoculum (3.5 × 10⁶ TCID₅₀). At the highest dose, physician or subject-reported signs of infection were classified as mild (all subjects), moderate (50%) and severe (16%) with peak symptoms recorded four days after infection. Clinical signs were correlated with nasal mucus weight (P 
ISSN:1743-422X
1743-422X
DOI:10.1186/s12985-015-0240-5