Pneumococcal Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
PneuMum: A Randomised Controlled Trial of Pneumococcal Polysaccharide Vaccination for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mothers to Protect Their Babies From Ear Disease
PneuMum is a randomised controlled trial that aims to find out if pneumococcal vaccination
for Australian Indigenous mothers, in the last few months of pregnancy or at delivery, can
prevent ear disease in infants. Mothers will receive the 23 valent pneumococcal
polysaccharide vaccine (23vPPV) either: a) during the third trimester of pregnancy; b) soon
after child birth; or c) seven months after child birth (control group). The adult
diphtheria, tetanus and acellular pertussis vaccine (dTPa) will be used as the control
vaccine for the birth dose.
The study aims to recruit 210 Indigenous women aged 18-39 years who have an uncomplicated
pregnancy. Following recruitment, subjects will be randomly assigned to one of the three
groups.
Each mother and infant will be followed from pregnancy until the baby is seven months of
age. Children will receive all of their routinely recommended vaccinations in accordance
with the standard vaccination schedule.
The primary outcome will be prevalence of ear infection at seven months of age, defined as
middle ear effusion or tympanic membrane perforation or acute otitis media. Pneumatic
otoscopy, video-otoscopy and tympanometry will be used in the ear examinations. The primary
analyses will be a direct comparison of the proportion of infants in the control group who
have nasopharyngeal carriage of vaccine type pneumococci at seven months of age compared to
infants in each of the other two groups and a similar comparison of the proportion with
middle ear disease.
PneuMum is a randomised controlled trial that aims to find out if pneumococcal vaccination
for Australian Indigenous mothers, in the last few months of pregnancy or at delivery, can
prevent ear disease in infants. Two vaccines will be used in this trial:
- The 23 valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (23vPPV), is currently recommended
for all Indigenous people in the Northern Territory from 15 years of age but uptake
among women of child-bearing age has been low.
- Adult diphtheria, tetanus and acellular pertussis vaccine (dTPa) will be used as the
control vaccine. This vaccine is recommended for all new parents who have not
previously been immunised but is not currently funded so would normally need to be
purchased on prescription through a pharmacist.
Rationale
Indigenous children experience the highest rates of acute and chronic ear infections in the
world, resulting in permanent ear damage, hearing loss and educational disadvantage. These
infections are mainly bacterial. Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is the predominant
pathogen. Pneumococcal colonisation and infection begins within days of birth, months before
any potential immunological protection from infant pneumococcal conjugate vaccine may be
expected. New strategies are needed to eliminate, or at least delay, this early-onset
pneumococcal colonisation.
Maternal vaccination with the 23 valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (23vPPV) during
pregnancy or at delivery is one strategy that may protect newborn infants through mechanisms
such as transplacental antibody transfer, increased secretory antibody in breast milk,
and/or by reducing nasopharyngeal carriage (and transmission to the infant) of maternal
pneumococci. Previous small studies using this strategy have been encouraging, but there
have been no studies properly evaluating nasopharyngeal carriage or disease endpoints in
infants.
Methods
We hope to recruit 210 Indigenous women aged 18-39 years who have an uncomplicated
pregnancy. Following recruitment, subjects will be randomly assigned to one of three groups:
- Group A will receive 23vPPV in the last few months of pregnancy
- Group B will receive 23vPPV soon after childbirth
- Group C will receive 23vPPV seven months after childbirth (the control group).
Women in Groups A and C will receive dTPa soon after childbirth (to conceal the intervention
groups), whereas women in Group C will be offered dTpa seven months after childbirth (end of
the observation period).
Study participants will be visited at least five times:
1. During the last few months of pregnancy (30-36 weeks gestation)
- The group of mothers receiving 23vPPV at this visit will also have a sample taken
of their blood
2. At Royal Darwin Hospital when the baby is born
- Each mother will receive either 23vPPV or dTpa depending on their allocation
- Each mother will have a sample taken of their blood, the cord blood, a
nasopharyngeal swab and a sample of expressed breast milk
3. When the baby is one month old
- Each baby will have their ears checked and a nasopharyngeal swab taken. A swab
will also be taken of any discharge from the baby's ear/s. Mothers will be asked
for sample of expressed breast milk.
4. When the baby is two months old
- The same checks and samples as the previous month.
5. When the baby is seven months old
- Each mother and baby will have the same checks and samples as the previous months.
Babies will also have a sample taken of their blood. Mothers who have not yet had
23vPPV will be offered that vaccine as will those who have not yet had dTpa.
Primary Outcome
The primary outcome will be prevalence of ear infection at seven months of age, defined as
middle ear effusion or tympanic membrane perforation or acute otitis media. Pneumatic
otoscopy, video-otoscopy and tympanometry will be used in the ear examinations. The primary
analyses will be a direct comparison of the proportion of infants in the control group
(Group C) who have nasopharyngeal carriage of vaccine type pneumococci at seven months of
age compared to infants in each of the other two groups and a similar comparison of the
proportion with middle ear disease.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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