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Clinical Trial Summary

While immunisation of school-age children against influenza is not recommended in Hong Kong, past experience in Japan and elsewhere suggests that immunisation of children may protect the wider community through its indirect transmission-limiting impact as well as the direct immunologic protection afforded vaccinated children themselves. We aim to assess whether vaccinating children against influenza protects vaccinees as well as their household contacts from infection.


Clinical Trial Description

Design and subjects: A double-blind randomised controlled trial of 800 subjects aged 6-17 drawn from the general population and their 2000 household contacts. The subjects will be randomised in a 3:2 ratio to the intervention and placebo groups, respectively. Serum samples will be collected from subjects pre- and 1 month post-vaccination, and after the influenza season. Serum samples will be collected from household contacts at baseline and at the end of the influenza season. During the follow-up period, subjects and household members will keep symptom diaries and those reporting influenza-like-illness will be offered free doctor consultations or home visits where we will arrange for collection of nose and throat swabs.

Study instruments: An antibody titre of ≥40 in the post-vaccine serum will be used to define seroprotection to those particular strains, while a four-fold or higher increase in antibody titres between baseline and end-of-season follow-up of the household contacts will define influenza infection during the season. Subjects and household contacts will be asked to keep symptom diaries, and during episodes of ILI we will collect nose and throat swabs for laboratory confirmation of influenza infection; the primary serology results will then be compared with clinical and laboratory-confirmed influenza episodes.

Interventions: 1 (intervention) inactivated influenza vaccine (Vaxigrip, Sanofi Pasteur); 2 (placebo) saline injection.

Main outcome measures: The proportions of subjects and household contacts with serology-confirmed influenza infection during follow-up among the 2 intervention arms.

Analysis: Intention to treat, adjusting for within-household correlation in influenza attack rates. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00792051
Study type Interventional
Source The University of Hong Kong
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 2008
Completion date December 2010

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