View clinical trials related to Vaccines.
Filter by:The clinical trial studies the human pathogen of SARS-CoV-2, with a specificity in the circulating Spike 2 protein in the human system. The clinical trial hypothesizes that SARS-CoV-2 human pathogen arises from immune attacks, underlying the severe physiological symptoms that can be lethal. It further hypothesizes that the vaccines do not deal with the Spike 2 protein that causes the immune attacks.
Phase 2 clinical trial in adults previously vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 in Chile with an initial schedule of two doses of CoronaVac® plus two booster doses with different vaccines. Subjects will randomly receive a third booster dose with Omicron, trivalent, or CoronaVac® vaccine. The humoral immunogenicity against COVID-19 will be compared in subjects that received the Omicron or the Trivalent vaccines with subjects that received CoronaVac® to determine the superiority of the two candidate vaccines versus CoronaVac®. Subjects will be followed for 6 months after the booster dose administration.
Comparative trial of tolerability, reactogenicity, safety and immunogenicity of the Flu-M vaccine as compared to the Vaxigrip® vaccine in terms of prevention of influenza in children aged 6 months to 9 years (at the time of the first vaccination).
Comparative study of tolerability, reactogenicity, safety and immunogenicity Flu-M [Inactivated Split Influenza Vaccine] vs. the Ultrix® vaccine for the prevention of influenza in pregnant women in the 2nd-3rd trimesters of pregnancy
Trial purpose is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and reactogenicity of the Vaccine for the prevention of infections caused by Haemophilus Influenzae Type b in volunteers aged 18-50.
The study will evaluate the efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity of two vaccination schedules of an inactivated vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 infection in adults. Two doses of the vaccine will be administered in a 0,14 and a 0,28-day schedule. Follow-up of safety and efficacy will be assessed for 12 months after the first dose. Immunogenicity will be studied in a subgroup of participants.
This is a Phase 4, open-label, single-arm, multicenter study in which subjects 6 to 17 years of age will receive 1 dose of 13vPnC.
This trial is taking place in Los Angeles, CA at clinics within the UCLA Health System. Despite the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommendation in 2010 that all people above 6 months of age should receive an annual flu vaccine, vaccination rates remain low: at 6m-4.9 yrs. (70%), 5-17.9 yrs. (56%), 18-64.9 yrs. (38%), and >65 yrs. (63%). The investigators will assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of 1, 2, 3 MyChart R/R messages as compared to the standard of care control (no messages).
A Phase 4 Study To Describe The Safety, Tolerability, And Immunogenicity Of 13- Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine Formulated In Multidose Vials When Given With Routine Pediatric Vaccines In Healthy Infants In India
Rationale and Background: Since 2013, Butantan Institute has been performing passive pharmacovigilance activities related to its triavalent, fragmented and inactivated vaccine (IB TIV). Objetive: To conduct an active surveillance study focusing on the elderly and health care professionals as part of Butantan pharmacovigilance plan, while passive surveillance activities will continue. The pharmacovigilance plan, via active surveillance, is being implemented in response to WHO requirements for pre-qualification of IB TIV.