Author
Listed:
- Meagan E. Deming
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Franklin R. Toapanta
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Marcela Pasetti
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Hana Golding
(US Food and Drug Administration)
- Surender Khurana
(US Food and Drug Administration)
- Tarek Hamouda
(BlueWillow Biologics, Inc.)
- Ali Fattom
(BlueWillow Biologics, Inc.)
- Yuanyuan Liang
(University of Maryland School of Medicine
University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Sharon M. Tennant
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Megan F. McGilvray
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Paula J. Bernal
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Jennifer J. Oshinsky
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Shrimati Datta
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Jasnehta Permala Booth
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Lynda Coughlan
(University of Maryland School of Medicine
University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Kathleen M. Neuzil
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Chad D. Costley
(BlueWillow Biologics, Inc.)
- Karen L. Kotloff
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Marcelo B. Sztein
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
- Justin R. Ortiz
(University of Maryland School of Medicine)
Abstract
Mucosal influenza vaccines may provide improved protection against infection and transmission, but their development is hindered by absence of immune correlates of protection. Here, we report a randomized, controlled phase I trial of a recombinant influenza A/H5 (A/Indonesia/05/2005, clade 2.1) hemagglutinin vaccine formulated with a nanoemulsion adjuvant (W805EC). The vaccine is administered intranasally in two doses 28 days apart at three antigen levels. Controls receive unadjuvanted H5 or placebo. Six months later, participants receive an intramuscular boost with unadjuvanted inactivated A/H5N1 (A/Vietnam/1203/2004, clade 1) vaccine. Primary outcomes are solicited and unsolicited adverse events (AEs), laboratory safety abnormalities, medically-attended AEs, potential immune-mediated conditions, new-onset chronic conditions, and serious AEs. All vaccines are well tolerated. After the intranasal series, hemagglutination inhibition and microneutralization responses are minimal. However, adjuvanted H5 recipients show significant increases in mucosal and serum IgG/IgA, surface plasmon resonance antibody binding, memory B and CD4 T cell activity, and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Following H5N1 boost, participants mount robust responses across measurements and have microneutralization responses against diverse H5N1 clades (including circulating clade 2.3.4.4b). Findings demonstrate successful mucosal priming and broad cross-clade responses. This intranasal vaccine supports further exploration of mucosal immune biomarkers and may accelerate development of intranasal influenza vaccines. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT05397119
Suggested Citation
Meagan E. Deming & Franklin R. Toapanta & Marcela Pasetti & Hana Golding & Surender Khurana & Tarek Hamouda & Ali Fattom & Yuanyuan Liang & Sharon M. Tennant & Megan F. McGilvray & Paula J. Bernal & J, 2025.
"An intranasal adjuvanted, recombinant influenza A/H5 vaccine primes against diverse H5N1 clades: a phase I trial,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-16, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-64686-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-64686-3
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