View clinical trials related to Immunization; Infection.
Filter by:To collect the immunisation history of participants enrolled in a previous vaccine study (REC 09/H0604/107) in order to assess the influence of genetic variation on the level of immunity to routine immunisations.
- Indication: Protection against varicella and herpes zoster - Study Objectives - Primary: Safety and tolerability assessment after single dose administration of NBP608 - Secondary: immunogenicity assessment after single dose administration of NBP608
Recent observations in Germany revealed above-average high proportions of refugees affected by infectious diseases of public health significance. Scrutiny of the vaccination status showed sizeable presence of seronegative subjects, with conspicuously higher prevalence among children and adolescents, thus indicating urgent necessity of i) rapid identification of carriers of vaccine-preventable diseases and ii) adjustment of protection against such infections to European Standards. Rapid immune status check needs comprehensive diagnostic tool permitting simultaneous assessment of seropositivity. Validation of such tools requires comparisons of the immune status of subjects with known vaccination history with that of migrants with incomplete or missing health and vaccination records.
Infection and cancer is a major cause of death and morbidity, and may be preventable through vaccination. It is not fully understood at the molecular level why some people respond better than others to vaccines until now the technology to assess this has not been available. This has impaired vaccine development. The overall goal of the Human Vaccines Project is to understand the 'rules' of how vaccines work. In this demonstration project the investigators will vaccinate healthy adults with hepatitis B vaccine to start to understand better how it works, ultimately helping with rational vaccine design in the future.
The purpose of this study is to: - (cohort 1) evaluate safety and immunogenicity (Haemophilus influenzae type b, Hib) of BK1310. - (cohort 2) evaluate efficacy and safety of BK1310 using ActHIB® and Tetrabik as a control in healthy infants.