Comparing the Antibody and B Cell Responses Induced by 1- or 2-dose 9-valent HPV (9vHPV) Vaccination in Healthy Adults
Emory University
Summary
This study aims to answer the question: does 1-dose HPV vaccination generate the same immune responses compared to 2- or 3-dose HPV vaccination? This will be done by studying the immune response in blood, lymph nodes, and bone marrow. Human papillomaviruses (HPV) cause cancers (cervical, anal, oropharyngeal, vulvar, vaginal, and penile), and the current HPV vaccine is highly effective at preventing disease by HPV types that cause 90% of cancer cases. While this vaccine generates high levels of antibodies that last for \> 10 years, understanding of how this occurs is limited, and studying this immune response will help design new and better vaccines. The study population consists of healthy adult (age 18-45) participants who have not previously received an HPV vaccine, do not have antibodies against certain types of HPV, do not have a history of HPV infection or disease (such as genital warts, abnormal pap test, or HPV DNA test), and do not have contraindications to study procedures. Populations of increased concern are not being enrolled.
Description
This study aims to determine whether a single-dose HPV vaccination produces the same immune response as a two- or three-dose HPV vaccination. The 1-dose HPV vaccination was recently recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) for people with healthy immune systems aged 9-20 years. To learn whether 1-dose HPV vaccination makes the same immune responses as 2- or 3-dose HPV vaccination in humans, there is a need to study the immune response to the HPV vaccine in the blood (where antibodies are), in the lymph nodes (where immune cells that make antibodies get activated), and in the bone ma…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–45 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- Yes
Inclusion Criteria: * Individuals aged 18-45 years old (inclusive), as the HPV vaccine is approved for this age range in adults * BMI ≤ 32 * Able to understand and give informed consent (in American English). * In good health based on physical examination, vital signs, medical history, and the investigator's clinical judgment. * Available and willing to participate for the duration of this study * Willing to undergo lymph node fine needle aspiration and bone marrow aspiration * Willing to consent to the future use of remaining (residual) samples/specimens with IRB review * Willing to defer co…
Interventions
- BiologicalGardasil-9
The 9-valent HPV VLP vaccine is a sterile liquid suspension prepared by combining the adsorbed VLPs of each HPV type and additional amounts of the aluminum-containing adjuvant and the final purification buffer. The 9-valent HPV vaccine, or Gardasil-9, is a sterile suspension for intramuscular administration. Each 0.5-mL dose of the vaccine also contains approximately 500 mcg of aluminum (provided as AAHS), 9.56 mg of sodium chloride, 0.78 mg of L-histidine, 50 mcg of polysorbate 80, 35 mcg of sodium borate, \<7 mcg yeast protein, and water for injection. The product does not contain a preservative or antibiotics. Gardasil-9 is supplied as a 0.5-mL single-dose vial or 0.5-mL single-dose prefilled Luer Lock syringe with tip cap. After thorough agitation, GARDASIL 9 is a white, cloudy liquid.
- DrugLidocaine injection
Lidocaine 1% will be injected intradermally and subcutaneously into the margin of the lymph node to be sampled to numb the area. To confer local anesthesia, 1-2% will be injected into the tissue surrounding the area where the bone marrow will be removed.
- DrugLorazepam
Lorazepam, an FDA-approved benzodiazepine, will be administered as an anxiolytic before the bone marrow aspirate procedure per the clinician who will perform the procedure. If needed, lorazepam will be administered sublingually per manufacturer dosing recommendations.
Location
- Hope Clinic of the Emory Vaccine CenterDecatur, Georgia