Plain-English translation of NCT05078905 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Researchers want to understand how your body's immune system responds when you receive a COVID-19 vaccine or vaccine for another emerging infectious disease. By collecting blood samples before you're vaccinated and then multiple times afterward, scientists can track exactly what happens in your body and how long that protection lasts.
Scientists need to understand how vaccines work in different people so they can improve vaccines and predict who might need extra doses or different types of protection. This knowledge helps doctors give better care during disease outbreaks.
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You'll visit the research clinic before you receive your vaccine to have a baseline blood sample taken. Then you'll return for additional blood draws at scheduled times after your vaccination—including after booster doses if you receive them. The study follows you for an extended period to track how your immune response changes and how long protection lasts. Most visits involve a simple blood draw, similar to what you'd experience at a routine doctor's appointment.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 6, 2026 · Not medical advice
United States