View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:A study to assess the effect of varying the time interval between doses on the immunogenicity of an adjuvanted recombinant spike protein Covid-19 vaccine (Spikogen/Covax-19)
Patients with COVID undergoing hip fracture repair have high mortality rates. If spinal anesthesia is associated with decreased rates of mortality, this study could provide hypothesis generating data for prospective studies. Investigators hypothesize that spinal anesthesia (SA) is associated with decreased mortality compared to general anesthesia (GA) for patients undergoing hip fracture surgery. The primary objective is to determine for patients undergoing hip surgery with COVID-19 infection, whether SA, as compared to GA, is associated with a lower rate of mortality 30 days postoperatively. The secondary objective is to determine whether SA, as compared to GA, is associated with a lower rate of morbidity 30 days postoperatively. Investigators will be analyzing a data set provided by the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP). Descriptive statistics will be performed. Multivariable logistic regression will be performed for the primary and secondary objectives.
This is Phase 1 study is to assess tolerability and immunogenicity of three dose levels of the investigational HDT-301 vaccine administered intramuscularly (IM), both in immunization-naïve participants and as a booster for those participants who previously received a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Safety and tolerability will be the primary endpoint assessed by incidence of adverse events at each dose through 12 months after completion of the vaccination regimen (either one dose, or two doses provided 56 days apart). Immunogenicity evaluations will be conducted for pre-specified timepoints as secondary and exploratory endpoints.
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV-2) specific antibody and neutralizing antibody level induced by adenovirus vector vaccines were lower than mRNA vaccines. Vaccine efficacy of ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 was lower than BNT162b2 and mRNA 1273 in clinical trials. The emergence of highly transmissible and mutant variants of SARS-COV-2 has raised the concern of COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness. The complete vaccination rate is still low in Taiwan. Strict border control measures are imposed by Central Epidemic Command Center. However, the measure of quarantine for flight crew is considered one of the breach of COVID-19 infection control. Despite most of the flight crew has fully vaccinated, several episodes of breakthrough infection occurred among flight crew resulting in domestic infection recently. Low neutralizing antibody was found in a proportion of fully vaccinated flight crew and healthcare workers. A 3rd booster COVID-19 dose is considered for flight crew and healthcare workers. This study is to determine the safety, reactogenicity, and immunogenicity of heterologous 3rd booster of mRNA and protein COVID-19 vaccines.
Popular topic:Clinical study on the immune program of recombinant Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine (CHO cell). Research purpose:Main purpose: To evaluate the immunogenicity of recombinant novel coronavirus vaccine (CHO cells) inoculated at 0,1,6 months or 0,1,4 months in persons aged 18 years and over. Secondary purpose: To evaluate the safety of the investigational vaccine in people aged 18 and above. Overall design: In this study, recombinant novel coronavirus vaccine (CHO cells) is inoculated at 0,1,6 months or 0,1,4 months in persons aged 18 years and older to evaluate the immunogenicity and safety. Study population:The study involved people 18 years of age and older. Test groups:A total of 300 subjects were enrolled, including 221 in the 18-59 age group and 79 in the ≥60 age group. Three doses of experimental vaccine were administered according to the 0,1,6 month immunization schedule (Study No. 001-150) or 0,1,4 months immunization schedule (Study No. 151-300).
To fast respond the coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the Indonesian government has launched "Vaksinasi Gotong Royong" (a mutual cooperation vaccination program) in which any company/legal entity/business entity may purchase vaccines to be given free of charge to their employees and families of employees (The Indonesian Ministry of Health, 2021). Vaccines provided for this program include the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) inactivated vaccines produced by Sinopharm. The Indonesian National Agency of Drug and Food Control (NADFC) has issued an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for several COVID-19 vaccines, including the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (Vero cell) inactivated produced by Sinopharm (NADFC, 2021). Following EUA, Kimia Farma Indonesia as the holder of EUA has the obligation to monitor the safety and effectiveness in Indonesian population.
A Clinical Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity and Safety of Sequential Immunization of Recombinant SARS-CoV-2 Fusion Protein Vaccine (V-01) Against COVID-19 in Healthy Adults Aged 18 Years and Older After the Vaccination of 2 Doses of Inactivated Vaccines
The CANCOV study will be the first Canadian study to provide a comprehensive evaluation of early, and 1-year, outcomes of outpatient and hospitalized COVID-19 survivors and their family caregivers, their varied trajectories and associated clinical risk factors. The overall objectives are to determine short- (in hospital) and longer-term (1, 3, 6 and 12 months post-acute hospital discharge) outcomes COVID-19+ patients across the spectrum of symptom severity, including outpatients and inpatients from GIM and ICU wards and their caregivers, and the clinical, sociodemographic, multi-omic predictors of these outcomes. By leveraging expertise from investigators across disciplines and divisions, this study presents a suite of complementary projects that explore the genetic, transcriptomic, epigenomic and immunologic evaluation of COVID-19 infection across the illness and recovery trajectory during the acute illness and in the context of multidimensional long-term outcomes. As there continues to be need for longer term follow up and research on Long-COVID, this study has added an optional extension to include 2-year, 3-year, 4-year and 5 year outcomes.
The study aims to develop and externally validate a prediction model for the critical outcomes of COVID-19 patients using predictors which can be easily obtained in clinical practice, including patients' demographic characteristics, self-reported medical conditions, and oral health.
The vaccination campaign in France began in early 2021 and was declared mandatory for all French people in July 2021. The efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines has since been widely demonstrated, as well as their safety, and now 60% of the adult population in France has received a first dose, most of them with Pfizer-BioNTech's mRNA vaccine. However, despite the increasing coverage, new data highlight the need for a booster dose for the most vulnerable people, including patients with immune deficiency. This makes it likely that a booster dose will also be needed in the general population, especially among healthcare workers, due to the active circulation of new variants since the beginning of summer 2021 and evidence of reduced protection against them. On the other hand, in addition to evaluating the potential benefit of a booster vaccination, it appears interesting to also evaluate a heterologous vaccination regimen, i.e. a booster with a different vaccine than the one used for the primary vaccination. Some studies have already evaluated a two-dose heterologous regimen and the results have shown stronger protection against SARS-CoV-2. In addition, this alternative could provide a real benefit in terms of accessibility, cost, and acceptability. The vaccine developed by Sanofi-Pasteur is based on a traditional recombinant protein approach using GSK's AS03 adjuvant. Two formulations of this vaccine are currently under development, the first targeting the S protein of the D614 strain (Wuhan strain), the second targeting the B.1.351 variant. Their value as a booster needs to be evaluated. The objective of this trial is therefore to evaluate the immunological response and safety induced by a homologous vaccine booster (Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine booster) and a heterologous vaccine booster (one of the two experimental Sanofi/GSK vaccines booster), on the D614 (Wuhan) strain and on the SARS-CoV-2 variants.