A Randomized, Phase I Study of DNA Vaccine OC-007 as a Booster Dose of COVID-19 Vaccine
COVID-19 Respiratory InfectionCOVID-19 Vaccine Adverse ReactionThis is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded phase I study, designed to evaluate the safety including reactogenicity and immunogenicity of this investigational DNA vaccine delivered intramuscularly by in vivo EP in human adults. The vaccine doses will be given to healthy adults aged 18 to 60 years, who have been previously vaccinated against COVID-19 with 3 doses of either Comirnaty® or Spikevax®, or both in any combination ≥3 months ago.
Immunogenicity and Safety of Fractional Booster Dose of COVID-19 Vaccines Available for Use in Pakistan/Brazil:...
COVID-19Since the emergence of the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pathogen in late 2019, millions of people around the world have fallen ill and died from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), with variant-fueled case spikes causing repeated cycles of morbidity and mortality. The rapid development and emergency use authorization of vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 presents an enormous opportunity to protect populations, but bottlenecks in production have led to demand for vaccines that far outpaces supply. This project will investigate the immunogenicity of fractional doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines given a minimum of six months following an initial two-dose schedule or following natural immunity via documented infection. The consortium of research partners from the Sabin Vaccine Institute, Aga Khan University, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), and Stanford University will recruit volunteers to receive a full or fractional booster dose of BNT162b2, AZD1222 or Sinovac following receipt of their primary vaccination series or PCR-confirmed natural infection in Pakistan. The research team will follow participants for six months from boosting, with blood draws at baseline, 28 days, 3 months and 6 months, and measure sero-response rate (SRR) by anti-Spike immunoglobulin G (IgG) binding enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with the ultimate aim of identifying whether fractional doses provide a similar immune response compared to full doses of vaccine.
Determining Reactogenicity and Immunogenicity of Delayed COVID-19 Vaccine Schedule in Children
Vaccine ReactionCOVID-192 moreCOVID-19 vaccine response data in children 5 to 11 years old remain scarce. Our understanding of the safety and immune responses including humoral and cellular responses generated in children remains limited. Safety of the vaccine is critical in the risk benefit assessment of vaccination in young children. Available data show a trend for increased risk of myocarditis after second dose, especially in males and younger age groups. It is unknown if reduced antigen dose will alter this risk in 5y to <12y age group. Reassuringly, data from early roll-out in the USA have not reported any safety signals to date. Alternate (reduce dosing or delayed dosing) strategies could help ensure maximum protection with reduced risk of side-effects. There is currently no data available to inform how long protection would last in the reduced dose or delayed dosing strategy. The trial will inform the potential use of alternate dosing schedules such as single dose or delayed dose to minimise risk and maximise benefit of COVID-19 vaccination in children 5 to 11 years old.
Intradermal Administration of a COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine in Elderly
Vaccination; InfectionCOVID-19Respiratory tract infections, e.g. caused by SARS-CoV-2, disproportionately affect elderly. Vaccination has shown to be the most cost-effective approach to prevent infections. However, older adults often fail to induce a potent immune response to vaccines, as was also seen recently for COVID-19 mRNA vaccines. This is likely due to immune dysfunction as a consequence of aging. To potentiate a stronger immune response, vaccine administration into the papillary dermis (intradermal, ID) has been proposed as an alternative strategy to intramuscular (IM) administration. Vaccination through the ID route has shown to be safe and equally or more effective than IM vaccination with a wide variety of vaccines. Recently, ID administration has been tested with two COVID-19 mRNA vaccines (Spikevax, Moderna and Comirnaty, Pfizer/BioNTech) in reduced (fractional) doses of the standard IM dose. To ease ID administration and thereby facilitate the implementation of this route, silicon-based microneedles have been developed. These needles have shown to allow ID administration of the Spikevax vaccine with equal safety and immunogenicity profiles as the traditional Mantoux approach in young adults. In the present study, we will investigate the immunogenicity of a 20 mcg dose of the COVID-19 mRNA Comirnaty vaccine through ID administration with silicon microneedles in elderly people (75 years and older), and compare this to immunogenicity of IM administration of a 20 mcg dose and a 30 mcg (standard IM) dose.
RECOVER-NEURO: Platform Protocol, Appendix_A to Measure the Effects of BrainHQ, PASC CoRE and tDCS...
Long COVIDLong Covid191 moreThis platform protocol is designed to be flexible so that it is suitable for a wide range of settings within health care systems, for remote settings, and in community settings where it can be integrated into COVID-19 programs and subsequent treatment plans. This protocol is a prospective, multi-center, multi-arm, randomized, controlled platform trial evaluating potential interventions for PASC-mediated cognitive dysfunction. The hypothesis is that PASC-mediated declines in cognitive domains, such as executive function and attention, may be improved by interventions that selectively focus on enhancing those domains. This design seeks to evaluate each intervention relative to the Active Comparator. The BrainHQ (alone) arm is important because the intervention is commercially available, accessible, relatively inexpensive, and does not require trained personnel to administer. BrainHQ has been also been proven effective in other studies of cognitive dysfunction such as studies in aging, mild cognitive impairment, traumatic brain injury, among others. The BrainHQ + PASC CoRE arm and the BrainHQ + tDCS arms are suspected to provide cognitive improvements beyond BrainHQ alone through different mechanisms. Both PASC CoRE and tDCS have extensive prior use and have demonstrated utility in improving aspects of cognitive function in other clinical settings..
RECOVER-NEURO: Platform Protocol to Measure the Effects of Cognitive Dysfunction Interventions on...
Long COVIDLong Covid191 moreThis platform protocol is designed to be flexible so that it is suitable for a wide range of settings within health care systems, for remote settings, and in community settings where it can be integrated into COVID-19 programs and subsequent treatment plans. This protocol is a prospective, multi-center, multi-arm, randomized, controlled platform trial evaluating potential interventions for PASC-mediated cognitive dysfunction. The hypothesis is that PASC-mediated declines in cognitive domains, such as executive function and attention, may be improved by interventions that selectively focus on enhancing those domains.
A Psychoeducational Intervention to Prevent the Psychological Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic in Primary...
Mental Health IssueBurnout1 moreThe goal of this quasi-experimental pragmatic study is to design, implement and evaluate a psychoeducational group intervention aimed at preventing the negative consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on the psychological wellbeing and mental health of primary care healthcare workers. The experience will be carried out in real clinical practice conditions and our purpose is to evaluate it not only in terms of clinical effectiveness but, especially, the terms of feasibility, usefulness, and possibility of this intervention being integrated into the usual practice in primary care centers. There will be two types of participation and a mixed quantitative-qualitative methodology. On one hand, the healthcare workers that will receive the intervention and participate in the study by responding to various before and after online surveys with standardized scales. On the other hand, the community psychologists in charge of implementing the intervention, having received guidelines and training, will help gather the participants' data and will provide their perceptions, assessments, and opinions on the program through other questionnaires. After the intervention, a selection of both healthcare workers and psychologists will participate in qualitative in-depth, or group interviews to explore the nuances of their perceptions of the program. The results will allow the investigators to know the usefulness and effectiveness of the intervention and, above all, to model and improve its design and implementation strategy, and promote its generalization beyond the framework of this project.
A Trial Evaluate the Immunogenicity and Safety of Recombinant COVID-19 Omicron-Delta Variant Vaccine...
COVID-19The study was designed as a randomized, blind and controlled trial. A total of 300 patients aged 18 and above who were immunized with recombinant novel coronavirus protein vaccine (CHO cell) for more than 4 months (60 patients aged 60 and above) were randomly and blind divided into the experimental group and the control group, and received the experimental vaccine and the control vaccine, respectively. In addition, 100 patients over 4 months after the completion of basic immunization with COVID-19 mRNA vaccine were selected as the open observation group, all of whom received 1 dose of experimental vaccine.
COVID-19 Testing and Vaccine Literacy for Women With Criminal Legal System Involvement
COVID-19 PandemicThe objective of this research is to use a localized mHealth intervention to boost COVID-19 testing and vaccine literacy, access, and uptake among women with CLSI
Immunogenicity and Safety Study of SARS-CoV-2 DNA Vaccine (ICCOV)
COVID-19This is an open-labeled, no placebo, Phase IIa clinical trial. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of one booster vaccine dose of SARS-CoV-2 DNA Vaccine (ICCOV) in adults aged 18 to 75 years who have received two to four dosese of COVID-19 vaccine.