First-in-Human PfSPZ-LARC2 Vaccination/CHMI
Launched by NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES (NIAID) · Dec 13, 2024
Trial Information
Current as of August 02, 2025
Recruiting
Keywords
ClinConnect Summary
This clinical trial is testing a new malaria vaccine called PfSPZ-LARC2. It aims to see if this vaccine is safe and effective in preventing malaria among healthy adults who have never had malaria before. The study will involve up to 40 participants aged 18 to 45, who will receive either the vaccine or a placebo (a harmless substance with no therapeutic effect) in a randomized manner. Participants will need to meet certain health criteria, such as being in good health and having a body mass index (BMI) between 18.0 and 35.0. Women who can become pregnant must agree to use effective birth control during the study.
If you decide to participate, you will receive the vaccine through a direct vein and will be monitored closely for any side effects. The main focus of the trial is to check how well the vaccine is tolerated and whether it can help the body build protection against malaria. This study is not yet recruiting participants, but it's designed to help researchers understand better ways to fight malaria, a serious disease that affects millions worldwide.
Gender
ALL
Eligibility criteria
- Inclusion Criteria:
- • 1. Provides written informed consent prior to the initiation of any study procedures.
- • 2. Able to understand and agrees to adhere to all planned study procedures and be available for all study visits.
- • 3. Male or non-pregnant female, 18 to 45 years of age (inclusive) at time of enrollment.
- • 4. BMI 18.0-35.0 kg/m\^2 at screening.
- • 5. Females of childbearing potential\* must agree to use or have practiced true abstinence\*\* or use at least one acceptable primary form of contraception\*\*\*,\*\*\*\*,\*\*\*\*\* Note: These criteria are applicable to females in a heterosexual relationship and child-bearing potential (i.e., the criteria do not apply to participants in a same sex relationship).
- • \*Not of childbearing potential - post-menopausal females (defined as having a history of amenorrhea for at least one year) or a documented status as being surgically sterile (hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation/salpingectomy, or Essure(R) placement).
- • \*\*True abstinence is 100 percent of time no sexual intercourse (male's penis enters the female's vagina). (Periodic abstinence \[e.g., calendar, ovulation, symptothermal, post-ovulation methods\] and withdrawal are not acceptable methods of contraception). If true abstinence changes, then participant agrees to use at least one form of acceptable primary contraception.
- • \*\*\*Acceptable forms of primary contraception include monogamous relationship with a vasectomized partner who has been vasectomized for 180 days or more prior to the participant's enrollment visit (Visit 1), intrauterine devices, birth control pills, barrier methods with spermicide and injectable/implantable/insertable hormonal birth control products.
- • Must use at least one acceptable primary form of contraception for at least 30 days prior to the enrollment visit (Visit 1) and at least one acceptable primary form of contraception for 60 days after the last vaccination or until 28 days post-CHMI, whichever is later.
- • If the participant is treated with Coartem(R) (artemether/lumefantrine - second-line anti-malarial treatment in this study), participants must agree to add an additional barrier method of contraception during treatment.
- • 6. Females of childbearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test within 24 hours prior to enrollment.
- • 7. Males of childbearing potential: use condoms with a female partner of childbearing potential from their enrollment visit (Visit 1), to 60 days after last vaccination or 28 days post-Controlled Human Malaria Infection (CHMI), whichever is later.\*,\*\*
- • \*This does not apply to males in an exclusively same-sex relationship.
- • \*\*Biological males who are post-pubertal and considered fertile until permanently sterile by bilateral orchiectomy or vasectomy.
- • 8. Male participants agree to refrain from sperm donation from the time of first vaccination until 60 days after the last vaccination or until 28 days post-CHMI, whichever is later.
- • 9. In good health\*
- • \*As determined by medical history and physical examination to evaluate acute or ongoing chronic medical diagnoses/conditions that have been present for at least 90 days, which would affect the assessment of safety of participants. Chronic medical diagnoses/conditions should be stable for the last 60 days (no hospitalizations, ER, or urgent care for condition or need for supplemental oxygen). This includes no change in chronic prescription medication, dose, or frequency as a result of deterioration of the chronic medical diagnosis/condition in the 60 days before enrollment. Any prescription change that is due to change of health care provider, insurance company, etc., or done for financial reasons, and in the same class of medication, will not be considered a deviation of this inclusion criterion. Any change in prescription medication due to improvement of a disease outcome, as determined by the participating site PI or appropriate sub-investigator, will not be considered a deviation of this inclusion criterion. Participants may be on chronic or as needed (prn) medications if, in the opinion of the participating site PI or appropriate sub-investigator, they pose no additional risk to participant safety or assessment of reactogenicity and immunogenicity, and do not indicate a worsening of medical diagnosis/condition. Similarly, medication changes subsequent to enrollment and study vaccination are acceptable provided the change was not precipitated by deterioration in the chronic medical condition, and there is no anticipated additional risk to the participant or interference with the evaluation of responses to study vaccination.
- • 10. Oral temperature is less than 100.4 degrees F (38 degrees C).
- • 11. Resting pulse, no greater than 100 beats per minute.
- • 12. Systolic BP is \</=140 mm Hg.
- • 13. Clinical screening laboratory evaluations (White Blood Cell Count \[WBC\], Hemoglobin \[Hgb\], Platelet Count\[PLTs\], Absolute Neutrophil Count\[ANC\], Absolute Lymphocyte Count \[ALC\], Alanine Aminotransferase \[ALT\], Aspartate Aminotransferase \[AST\], creatinine, glucose) are within acceptable normal local reference ranges\* \*A low creatinine, AST, or ALT value below the normal range are acceptable for trial inclusion as such results are not considered to be clinically significant. If laboratory values are within the normal local reference ranges and Grade 1 (mild) grading criteria are met, these abnormal laboratory values are acceptable for trial inclusion if they are not deemed to be clinically significant by the PI and/or medically trained study clinician listed on Form 1572.
- • 14. Must agree to refrain from donating blood or plasma during the study (outside of this study).
- • 15. Willing to refrain from blood donation for 3 years following CHMI.
- • 16. Agree not to travel to a malaria endemic region until 28 days after CHMI.
- • 17. Willing to take anti-malarial medicines if deemed necessary per protocol or at investigator discretion.
- • 18. Passing score on written Assessment of Understanding (minimum passing score of 80 percent required for participation and one repeat testing is allowed if necessary).
- Exclusion Criteria:
- • 1. Unable to provide informed consent including inability to pass the test of understanding.
- • 2. Receipt of a malaria vaccine in a prior clinical trial.
- • 3. History of malaria infection within 2 years prior to study participation.
- • 4. History of a splenectomy or sickle cell disease.
- • 5. History of a non-febrile seizures or complex febrile seizures.
- • 6. Current use of systemic immunosuppressant/immunomodulatory pharmacotherapy.
- • 7. Receipt of a live vaccine within 4 weeks of first vaccination or of 3 or more non-live vaccines within 2 weeks of first vaccination.
- • 8. Receipt of a live vaccine within 4 weeks of CHMI for infectivity controls or of 3 or more non-live vaccines within 2 weeks of CHMI for infectivity controls.
- • 9. Females who are breast-feeding, pregnant or planning to become pregnant during the study period.
- • 10. Known allergy to atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone(R)), artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem(R)), or any component of the investigational products.
- • 11. History of anaphylaxis or other life-threatening reaction to a vaccine.
- • 12. Participation in any study of investigational vaccine/drug \<4 weeks before enrollment that in the estimation of the site PI might adversely affect safety or data quality.
- • 13. Evidence of increased cardiovascular disease risk (defined as \>10 percent five-year risk by non-laboratory method or prior history of myocardial infarction or myocarditis.
- • 14. Plan to participate in another investigational vaccine/drug research during the study.
- • 15. Plan for major surgery between enrollment until 28 days post-CHMI.
- • 16. Current or anticipated use of any drug with anti-malarial activity that would precede or coincide with malaria challenge or vaccination\* \*Such medications include but are not limited to doxycycline, tetracycline, erythromycin, clindamycin, azithromycin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, atovaquone, proguanil, pyrimethamine, quinine, tafenoquine, primaquine, artemisinin derivatives, chloroquine and other 4-amino and 8-aminoquinolines.
- • 17. Current or anticipated use of medications known to cause drug reactions with atovaquone-proguanil or artemether-lumefantrine (e.g., cimetidine, metoclopramide, antacids, and kaolin).
- • 18. Current or anticipated use of medications associated with moderate or high risk for prolonging the QT interval\*
- • \* Such medications include but are not limited to quinine, quinidine, halofantrine, mefloquine, procainamide, disopyramideamiodarone, sotalol, pimozide, ziprasidone, tetracycline, doxycycline, fluoroquinolone, imidazole, and triazole antifungal agents.
- • 19. Current or anticipated use of medications that undergo clinically significant metabolism via the cytochrome enzyme CYP2D6.\*
- • \*Such medications include but are not limited to primaquine, tafenoquine, flecainide, imipramine, amitriptyline, clomipramine.
- • 20. Current or anticipated use of medications that undergo clinically significant metabolism via CYP3A4 or are clinically significant inhibitors or strong inducers of CYP3A4.\*,\*\*
- • \*Such medications include but not limited to (e.g., rifampin, carbamazepine, phenytoin, and/or St. John's wort)
- • \*\*Sex hormones, including hormonal contraceptives, are permitted medications.
- • 21. Current or anticipated use of medications that have a clinically significant mixed effect on CYP3A4 (e.g., ritonavir, efavirenz).
- • 22. Known disturbances of the electrolyte balance (e.g., hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia).
- • 23. Positive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or hepatitis B surface antigen (HbsAg) serology, or hepatitis C virus (HCV) seropositivity with evidence of HCV viremia.
- • 24. Positive Plasmodium 18S rRNA Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) at baseline.
- • 25. An abnormal electrocardiogram\*
- • \* An abnormal ECG is defined as one showing pathologic Q waves and significant ST-T wave changes; prolonged QT interval; left ventricular hypertrophy; any non-sinus rhythm including isolated premature ventricular contractions, but excluding isolated premature atrial contractions; right or left bundle branch block; or advanced (secondary or tertiary) A-V heart block; or other clinically significant abnormalities on the electrocardiogram as determined by study clinicians licensed to make medical decisions on the Form FDA 1572.
- • 26. History or family history of prolongation of the QT interval.
- • 27. Any other exclusionary medical, psychiatric, social, behavioral or occupational condition or situation as judged by the site PI intended to ensure participant safety and quality of the trial\* \*These kind of exclusionary medical, psychiatric, social, behavioral or occupational condition(s) or situation(s) (including active alcohol or drug abuse) include aspects that could impair the participant's ability to give informed consent, increase the risk to the participant of participation in the study, affect the ability of the participant to participate fully in the study, or negatively impact the quality, consistency, integrity or interpretation of data derived from their participation in the study.
About National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases (Niaid)
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) is a key component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) dedicated to advancing the understanding, prevention, and treatment of infectious and immune-mediated diseases. Through rigorous clinical trials, NIAID aims to foster innovative research that enhances public health and addresses global health challenges, including emerging infectious diseases and allergies. The institute collaborates with various partners, including academic institutions, industry, and international organizations, to translate scientific discoveries into effective therapies and vaccines. NIAID's commitment to high-quality clinical research is integral to improving health outcomes and informing policy decisions in the realm of infectious diseases and immunology.
Contacts
Jennifer Cobb
Immunology at National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Locations
Seattle, Washington, United States
Seattle, Washington, United States
Patients applied
Timeline
First submit
Trial launched
Trial updated
Estimated completion
Not reported