1. A Multicenter, Controlled Human Infection Study of Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 in Healthy Adults
- Author
-
Justin R Ortiz, David I Bernstein, Daniel F Hoft, Christopher W Woods, Micah T McClain, Sharon E Frey, Rebecca C Brady, Christopher Bryant, Ashley Wegel, Robert W Frenck, Emmanuel B Walter, Getahun Abate, Sarah R Williams, Robert L Atmar, Wendy A Keitel, Nadine Rouphael, Mathew J Memoli, Mamodikoe K Makhene, Paul C Roberts, and Kathleen M Neuzil
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Background We evaluated the associations between baseline influenza virus–specific hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) and microneutralization (MN) titers and subsequent symptomatic influenza virus infection in a controlled human infection study. Methods We inoculated unvaccinated healthy adults aged 18–49 years with an influenza A/California/04/2009/H1N1pdm-like virus (NCT04044352). We collected serial safety labs, serum for HAI and MN, and nasopharyngeal swabs for reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing. Analyses used the putative seroprotective titer of ≥40 for HAI and MN. The primary clinical outcome was mild-to-moderate influenza disease (MMID), defined as ≥1 postchallenge positive qualitative RT-PCR test with a qualifying symptom/clinical finding. Results Of 76 participants given influenza virus challenge, 54 (71.1%) experienced MMID. Clinical illness was generally very mild. MMID attack rates among participants with baseline titers ≥40 by HAI and MN were 64.9% and 67.9%, respectively, while MMID attack rates among participants with baseline titers Conclusions We achieved a 71.1% attack rate of MMID. High baseline HAI and MN were associated with protection from illness. Clinical Trials Registration. NCT04044352.
- Published
- 2023