Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Allergy and Immunology
  • Corona Virus Infection
  • Herpes Zoster
Type
Interventional
Phase
Early Phase 1
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Two hundred nursing home residents, both men and women, aged >65 years, who have not acquired COVID-19 (verified through a screening questionnaire and by both viral antigen and antibody testing at the screen and least one week before the first injection) will get two intramuscular injections containing either the Shingrix vaccine, and the other half, two injections containing a normal saline (comparison) approximately two months apart. Blood samples are collected before the baseline injection (day zero), 1 day after the second injection (61 days post) and 1 month following the second injection (90 days). Weekly symptom checks and monthly antibody testing around day 180- will identify residents with COVID-19 and the severity of COVID-19 symptoms.Masking: Triple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator)Masking Description: Blinding is done to ensure staff and residents do not modify reports or reporting of COVID symptoms and to minimize other behaviors (such as sleeping, eating habits, physical activity) that may affect their innate immune system. It will also serve to minimize any bias in the processing/analysis of samples and the interpretation of the study results. During the conduct of the study, only three people (the statistician and 2 research nurses who will reconstitute, draw up, and administer the injections) will have knowledge of the group assignments. Participants, the staff at the nursing home, the staff collecting the COVID symptom data, and study investigators are blinded to the subject assignments.Primary Purpose: Basic Science

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 65 years and 100 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

The purpose of this pilot study is to provide preliminary data in support of the concept that training of the innate immune system occurs following immunization (2 doses ,3 months apart) with the Shingrix vaccine as compared to placebo (normal saline) in older adults residing in nursing homes. Two h...

The purpose of this pilot study is to provide preliminary data in support of the concept that training of the innate immune system occurs following immunization (2 doses ,3 months apart) with the Shingrix vaccine as compared to placebo (normal saline) in older adults residing in nursing homes. Two hundred nursing home residents, both men and women, aged >65 years, who have not acquired COVID-19 (verified through a screening questionnaire and by both viral antigen and antibody testing at the screen and least one week before the first injection) will get two intramuscular injections containing either the Shingrix vaccine, and the other half, two injections containing a normal saline (placebo comparison) approximately three months apart. Blood samples are collected before the baseline injection (day zero), 1 day after the second injection (91 days post) and 1 month following the second injection (120 days). Weekly symptom checks and monthly antibody testing around day 180- will identify residents with COVID-19 and the severity of COVID-19 symptoms. The primary outcome is the difference in immune cell capacity to produce type I interferon, interferon associated molecules, and proinflammatory mediators after receiving a 2 injection series of the Shingrix vaccine versus normal saline. Secondary outcomes include differences in hospitalization, pulmonary infections, and positive COVID-19 cases (via antibody testing on days 90, 120, and 180) in the Shingrix and normal saline groups. We anticipate that residents receiving the Shingrix vaccine will demonstrate signs of "trained" immunity compared to a control group receiving saline injections.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04523246
Collaborators
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation
Investigators
Study Director: Barbara W. Carlson, RN, Ph.D. Professor, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center