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Effects of Oral Iron Supplementation on Vaccine Response in Iron Deficient Kenyan Women

Effects of Oral Iron Supplementation on Vaccine Response in Iron Deficient Kenyan Women

Recruiting
18-49 years
Female
Phase N/A

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Overview

Iron deficiency (ID) anemia (IDA) is a global public health problem, with the highest prevalence in Africa. Vaccines often underperform in low- and middle- income countries (LMIC), and undernutrition, including ID, likely plays a role. Recent studies have shown the importance of iron status in vaccine response. Intravenous iron given at time of vaccination improved response to yellow fever and COVID-19 vaccines in IDA Kenyan women. Whether oral iron treatment would have a similar beneficial effect on vaccine response is uncertain. Also, timing of oral iron treatment needs further investigation.

The co-primary objectives of this study are to assess 1) whether IDA in Kenyan women impairs vaccine response, and whether oral iron treatment improves their response; 2) the timing of oral iron treatment to improve vaccine response (prior to vaccination vs at time of vaccination).

We will conduct a double-blind randomized controlled trial in southern Kenya to assess the effects of iron supplementation on response to three single-shot vaccines: Johnson & Johnson COVID- 19 (JJ COVID-19), the quadrivalent meningococcal vaccine (MenACWY) and the typhoid Vi polysaccharide vaccine (Typhim Vi). Women with IDA will be recruited and randomly assigned to three study groups: group 1 (pre- treatment) will receive 100 mg oral iron as ferrous sulfate (FeSO4) daily on days 1-56; group 2 (simultaneous treatment) will receive matching placebo daily on days 1-28, and 200 mg oral iron as FeSO4 daily on days 29-56; and group 3 (control) will receive matching placebo daily on days 1-56. Women in all groups will receive the JJ COVID-19 vaccine, the MenACWY and the Typhim Vi vaccine on day 28. Cellular immune response and serology will be measured at 28 days after vaccination in all groups.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the trial
  • Female aged 18-49 years
  • Moderate anemia (Hb <110 g/L, but not severely anemic with Hb <80 g/L) • Iron deficient (ZnPP >40 mmol/mol haem)
  • Anticipated residence in the study area for the study duration

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Major chronic infectious disease (e.g., HIV infection);
  • Major chronic non-infectious disease (e.g., Type 2 diabetes, cancer);
  • Chronic medications;
  • Use of iron-containing mineral and vitamin supplementation 2 weeks prior to study start;
  • COVID-19 vaccine or confirmed COVID-19 infection within the past 2 years
  • MenACWY vaccine in the past
  • Typhoid vaccine in the past
  • Pregnant (confirmed by rapid test during screening) or lactating.
  • Malaria (confirmed by rapid test) à study start will be postponed

Study details
    Iron Deficiency Anemia

NCT05919472

Prof Simon Karanja

29 January 2024

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