Overview

Pregnancy and Infant PrEparedness pLatform IN Europe, RSV-International Adaptive Platform Trial to Evaluate Two Approved Prevention Options to Prevent Respiratory Syncytial Virus in Infants: Maternal Vaccine to Women in Pregnancy and Monoclonal

Status:
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Trial end date:
2028-12-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
RSV (which stands for Respiratory Syncytial Virus) is an infection that causes cold-like symptoms and is most common during winter months. Most people with RSV infection get better by themselves but babies and younger children can become very poorly. About 1 in 15 infants with confirmed RSV within the first 12 months of life will be hospitalised, and a very small proportion will be seriously ill and may die. Currently there are two different prevention options that can be used to prevent RSV infection in babies. One is a vaccine given to the mother during pregnancy, and the other is a monoclonal antibody given by injection to the baby. Although both prevention options work well on their own and are safe, neither provides 100% protection to the infant. It is not known whether giving both medicines, one to the mother in pregnancy and one to the infant, would provide better protection than giving only one medicine - this is what the PIPELINE-RSV study will look at. PIPELINE-RSV-International will recruit about 1500 pregnant women from across Europe in UK, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Belgium. A parallel trial, PIPELINE-RSV-France, running in France will recruit about 1000 pregnant women in France; the protocols will align on key aspects and the data will be analysed together. The study will include three study groups with different prevention options used in each: (1) a vaccine given to the mother in pregnancy, (2) an injection given to the baby at the beginning of RSV season, or (3) both a vaccine given to the mother in pregnancy and an injection given to the baby at around 4 months of age. Each mother-baby pair will be randomly allocated to group by a computer. The numbers of babies in each of these groups who acquire RSV will be compared. In some countries only two of the three study groups may be available. Pregnant women and their babies will be followed until the baby reaches 12 months of age. Information will be collected about medically-important side effects either the mother or the baby had from their medicine(s) and any symptoms of RSV the baby had. Visits with the mother and baby will occur at birth, and 4 and 12 months later; these will ideally be in-person at birth and at 12 months. The mother will complete questionnaires via a Web-based platform to report any non-routine in-person visits, once in pregnancy and after the baby is born twice a month or monthly (more often in the winter), to also report baby's symptoms, to report their trial experience when the baby is 4 and 12 months' old, and to provide their views on vaccination at birth, and when the baby is 4 and 12 months' old. If the baby develops symptoms that might be RSV, their mother or another caregiver will be asked to take a sample using a swab from the baby's nose or mouth, and to send it by post for testing to find out if the baby has RSV. As well as the main research study, there are also some substudies. A questionnaire will be given to women who consent to take part, to find out their motivations for joining the study and how they prefer to receive information about taking part in studies. A small number of women will be asked to take part in a study to look at how mothers' and babies' immune systems respond to the two different study prevention options , and to investigate different ways of collecting samples from their babies. In addition, researchers will use data from the study to see whether giving both medicines is cost-effective compared with giving just one medicine. The study might be adapted in the future to look at other medicines for preventing RSV infection, when they become available.
Phase:
PHASE3
Details
Lead Sponsor:
PENTA Foundation
Treatments:
abrysvo
nirsevimab