View clinical trials related to Rabies Vaccine Adverse Reaction.
Filter by:This trial is a randomized, blind, similar vaccine controlled, single center, non-inferiority design phase III clinical trial, with a study population of 10 to 60 years old, conducted in two stages.Phase 1 and Phase 2
This clinical trial is carried out in two phases. The first phase adopts an open design, and the second phase adopts a randomized, blinded, and similar vaccine-controlled non-inferiority trial design. The first stage: According to the order of two age groups of 18-60 years old and 10-17 years old, 40 cases were enrolled in each age group (20 persons for the 5-dose program and 20 for the 4-dose program). Subjects in the 5-dose group received 1 dose of test vaccine on 0, 3, 7, 14, and 28 days each. Subjects in the 4-dose group received 1 dose each on both arms on day 0, and 1 dose on day 7 and day 21 each. All subjects in the first stage were only observed for safety and were followed up to 6 months after the entire course of vaccination. The second stage: the total number of enrolled 2400 cases, 10-60 years old, the 4-dose program group and the 5-dose program group of the test vaccine, the 4-dose program group and the 5-dose program group of the control vaccine according to the random ratio 1:1:1:1. Among the total number of participants, 1680 cases (420 cases per group) were simultaneously observed for immunogenicity and safety, and the remaining 720 subjects (180 cases per group) only underwent safety observation. 800 subjects (200 cases in each group) received 6-month immune persistence observation after full vaccination, and 400 subjects in the test vaccine group received 12 months immune persistence observation after full vaccination. In the second stage, 1680 subjects were collected before the immunization, 7 days after the first dose, 14 days after the first dose, and 14 days after the full vaccination to test rabies virus antibodies to evaluate the immunogenicity of the test vaccine. 800 subjects were in the whole process Immune persistent blood sampling was performed 6 months after vaccination, and subjects in the test vaccine group were further subjected to immune persistent blood sampling 12 months after the full course of vaccination to evaluate immune durability. Collect all AEs within 30 minutes after each dose, AEs from 0-7 days, all non-collective AEs from the first dose to 30 days after the full course of vaccination, and all serious AEs from the first dose to 6 months after the full course of vaccination Adverse events.
People who are at frequent or continuous risk of exposure to rabies virus should be vaccinated against the disease (pre-exposure prophylaxis). This includes people who work with rabies virus in research or diagnostic laboratories or vaccine production facilities, veterinarians, staff, animal-control and wildlife workers in areas where rabies is endemic. Veterinary students in clinical placements and externships are included in this category. Currently, DVM students at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (RUSVM) are vaccinated against rabies in their 7th semester (final pre-clinical semester). Vaccinations are done by RUSVM Health Services using Rabivax-S, produced by the Serum Institute of India (study co-sponsors). Previously-unvaccinated students receive three injections of vaccine, on day 0, 7 and 21-28. The aim of the study is to generate additional data on safety and tolerability of Rabivax-S administered as pre-exposure prophylaxis to this population.