Cholera Clinical Trial
— SCVBOfficial title:
An Individually Randomized, Placebo-controlled Trial to Measure the Protection Conferred by a Single Dose Regimen of Bivalent, Killed, Whole Cell Oral Cholera Vaccine (Shanchol™) in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Verified date | June 2015 |
Source | International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Bangladesh remains endemic for cholera, which experiences biannual outbreaks with additional
epidemics seen during times of floods, cyclones or any natural disaster. It affects all age
groups with the majority of fatal cases occurring in children . Therefore, immunization
against cholera remains an important public health component in the prevention and control of
the disease .The current two-dose regimen of the internationally available oral cholera
vaccines (OCV) create a logistical and programmatic challenge for use in national programs or
during epidemics ,so it is important to determine if a single dose vaccine will be protective
in regions where cholera is endemic. If the vaccine is found to be efficacious following a
single dose, this will have profound implications for the use of the vaccine in areas with
limited resources particularly in complex emergencies where a multiple dose regimen is
difficult to deploy. A single-dose regimen of this vaccine will improve its 'field ability'
and allow the vaccine to be used for outbreak control, especially in difficult settings where
the risk of cholera is extremely high and provisions for clean water and sanitation are not
available. With low OCV production rates, larger populations could be immunized against
cholera if a single dose is found to be efficacious. A single-dose schedule could facilitate
the inclusion of a global stockpile strategy.
The study design is a two-arm individually randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial.
The primary outcome of the study is the proportion of persons receiving 1 dose of vaccine or
placebo who are detected with diarrhea with faecal excretion of V. cholera O1 in the study
treatment centres from 7 days to 6 months after dosage and whose identity is confirmed
through home visit.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 204438 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | December 1, 2017 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 1 Year and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Healthy subjects > 1 year of age and above Living in high risk area for cholera Provision of Informed consent for participating in the study by participant /parent or guardian as well as verbal assent for children 11-17 years. Exclusion Criteria: Pregnant women Aged less than 1 year History of taking cholera vaccine |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Bangladesh | International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b) | Dhaka |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh | Government of Bangladesh, International Vaccine Institute |
Bangladesh,
Kanungo S, Paisley A, Lopez AL, Bhattacharya M, Manna B, Kim DR, Han SH, Attridge S, Carbis R, Rao R, Holmgren J, Clemens JD, Sur D. Immune responses following one and two doses of the reformulated, bivalent, killed, whole-cell, oral cholera vaccine among — View Citation
Khan IA, Saha A, Chowdhury F, Khan AI, Uddin MJ, Begum YA, Riaz BK, Islam S, Ali M, Luby SP, Clemens JD, Cravioto A, Qadri F. Coverage and cost of a large oral cholera vaccination program in a high-risk cholera endemic urban population in Dhaka, Banglades — View Citation
Saha A, Chowdhury MI, Khanam F, Bhuiyan MS, Chowdhury F, Khan AI, Khan IA, Clemens J, Ali M, Cravioto A, Qadri F. Safety and immunogenicity study of a killed bivalent (O1 and O139) whole-cell oral cholera vaccine Shanchol, in Bangladeshi adults and childr — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Number of participants with a single dose regimen oral cholera vaccine Shanchol will get protection | Shanchol vaccine will be given to healthy, non-pregnant residents aged one and above in Dhaka, Bangladesh, against culture-proven V. cholerae O1 diarrhea which has been detected in all treatment settings serving the catchment population. | 7 days to 6 months | |
Secondary | Number of participants get protection with a single dose Shanchol after dosing against culture-proven V. cholerae O1 diarrhea | Number of participants with a single dose Shanchol with onset of 7 days to 12 months, from 7 days to 18 months and 7 days to 24 months after dosing against culture-proven V. cholerae O1 diarrhea detected in treatment centre | 7 days to 24 months | |
Secondary | Number of participants get protection with the single dose regimen of Shanchol against culture proven V. Cholerae O1 diarrhea with severe dehydration, V. Cholerae O139 diarrhea,V. Cholerae O139 diarrhea with severe dehydration . | Number of participants with the single dose regimen of Shanchol against culture proven V. Cholerae O1 diarrhea with severe dehydration, V. Cholerae O139 diarrhea,V. Cholerae O139 diarrhea with severe dehydration with onset from 7 days to 12 months, from 7 days to 18 months and from 7 days to 24 months after dosing | 7 days to 24 months | |
Secondary | Number of participants with a single dose Shanchol with onset of 7 days to 6 months,7 days to 12 months, from 7 days to 18 months and 7 days to 24 months after dosing against acute watery diarrhoea detected in treatment centre | 7 days to 24 months | ||
Secondary | Number of participants with a single dose Shanchol with onset of 7 days to 6 months,7 days to 12 months, from 7 days to 18 months and 7 days to 24 months after dosing against acute watery diarrhea with severe dehydration detected in treatment centre | 7 days to 24 months | ||
Secondary | Serum vibriocidal antibody responses to oral cholera vaccine Shanchol in healthy,non-pregnant residents, aged one year and older in a subset of population | Serum vibriocidal (To El Tor Inaba and ogawa serogroup O1 and to serogroup O139) antibody responses to a single dose regimen of the bivalent, killed, whole cell-based oral cholera vaccine Shanchol in healthy,non-pregnant residents, aged one year and older in a subset of population | 14 days | |
Secondary | Safety up to 28 days following a single dose of the bivalent, killed, whole cell oral cholera vaccine Shanchol™ administered to healthy, non-pregnant residents one year and older | 28 days |
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