| Literature DB >> 21816029 |
Amanda Leach1, Johan Vekemans, Marc Lievens, Opokua Ofori-Anyinam, Conor Cahill, Seth Owusu-Agyei, Salim Abdulla, Eusebio Macete, Patricia Njuguna, Barbara Savarese, Christian Loucq, W Ripley Ballou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals and the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative are working in partnership to develop a malaria vaccine to protect infants and children living in malaria endemic regions of sub-Saharan Africa, which can be delivered through the Expanded Programme on Immunization. The RTS,S/AS candidate vaccine has been evaluated in multiple phase I/II studies and shown to have a favourable safety profile and to be well-tolerated in both adults and children. This paper details the design of the phase III multicentre efficacy trial of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine candidate, which is pivotal for licensure and policy decision-making.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21816029 PMCID: PMC3199907 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Study centers and clinical trial partners.
Figure 2Study design.
Treatment groups and vaccination schedule
| Primary vaccination: 0, 1, 2 months | Booster vaccination: month 20 | |
|---|---|---|
| "R3R" group | RTS,S/AS01 | RTS,S/AS01 |
| "R3C" group | RTS,S/AS01 | Control (MCC vaccine) |
| "C3C" group | Control (rabies vaccine) | Control (MCC vaccine) |
| "R3R" group | RTS,S/AS01 + DTPwHepB/Hib + OPV | RTS,S/AS01 + OPV |
| "R3C" group | RTS,S/AS01 + DTPwHepB/Hib + OPV | Control (MCC vaccine) + OPV |
| "C3C" group | Control (MCC vaccine) + DTPwHepB/Hib + OPV | Control (MCC vaccine) + OPV |
MCC: Meningococcal C conjugate vaccine - Meningitec™ (Wyeth), NeisVac-C™ (Baxter) or Menjugate™ (Novartis)
Cell culture rabies vaccine - human diploid cell rabies vaccine (Imovax™, Sanofi Pasteur), purified chick embryo cell culture vaccine (Rabipur™/Rabavert™, Novartis) or purified Vero cell culture rabies vaccine (VeroRab™, Sanofi Pasteur)
DTPwHepB/Hib - Tritanrix HepB™ and Hiberix™ (GSK Biologicals)
OPV: Oral polio vaccine - Polio Sabin™ (GSK Biologicals)
Each child will receive all three doses of rabies vaccine or MCC vaccine from the same manufacturer
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Male and female children aged 6-12 weeks or 5-17 months at time of first vaccination |
|---|---|
| Children in 6-12 week age category must be more than 28 days old at screening and must not have received previous vaccination against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis or | |
| Acute disease at time of enrolment | |
| Acute or chronic, clinically significant pulmonary, cardiovascular, hepatic or renal functional abnormality | |
| Major congenital defect | |
| Malnutrition requiring hospitalization | |
| Hb ≤8 g/dL with clinical signs of heart failure or severe respiratory distress OR Hb ≤5 g/dL | |
| Currently meeting WHO criteria for stage III or IV severity HIV disease | |
| History of allergic reactions, significant IgE-mediated events or anaphylaxis to previous immunizations | |
| History of allergic disease or reactions likely to exacerbated by any component of the vaccine | |
| History of a neurological disorder or atypical febrile seizure | |
| Concurrently participating in another clinical study of a drug or vaccine unlicensed for that indication, except studies aiming to improve treatment or management of severe malaria | |
| Use of a drug or vaccine unlicensed for that indication other than study vaccines within 30 days preceding the first dose of study vaccine or planned use during the study period | |
| Previous participation in another malaria vaccine trial | |
| Receipt of a vaccine within the preceding 7 days | |
| Other factors that the investigator considers would increase the risk of an adverse outcome or result in incomplete or poor quality data |
Study objectives
| Efficacy against clinical malaria over 1 year in children aged 6-12 weeks at first vaccination (co-administration of DTPwHepB/Hib)1 | |
| Immunogenicity of a primary vaccination course | |
| Safety of a primary vaccination course | |
| Immunogenicity and safety in HIV-infected children |
1 Represent the primary objectives
2 If important differences in the co-primary objectives are observed between boys and girls, all primary and secondary efficacy and immunogenicity endpoints will be presented separately for boys and girls
Case definition of clinical malaria
| Criterion | Primary definition | Secondary definition 1 | Secondary definition 2 | Secondary definition 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Threshold of | >5,000 parasites/μL | >0 parasites/μL | >500 parasites/μL | >20,000 parasites/μL |
| Fever | axillary temperature ≥37.5°C | axillary temperature ≥37.5°Cor history of fever within 24 h of presentation | axillary temperature ≥37.5°C | axillary temperature ≥37.5°C) |
| Case detection | Child is unwell and brought to healthcare facility | Child is unwell and brought to healthcare facility | Child is unwell and brought to healthcare facility | Child is unwell and brought to healthcare facility |
| Other | ||||
1 Refer to [22] for primary definition of severe malaria
Case definitions of secondary efficacy endpoints
| Definition 1 | Other definitions | |
|---|---|---|
| Hb <5.0 g/dL identified on morbidity surveillance in association with | Hb <5.0 g/dL identified on morbidity surveillance | |
| Hb <5.0 g/dL identified at cross sectional survey | Hb <8.0 g/dL identified at cross sectional survey | |
| Medical hospitalisation2 in association with | ||
| Medical hospitalization2 | ||
| Positive blood culture7 | ||
| Cough or difficulty breathing (on history) | As definition 1, PLUS | |
| Fatal case of severe malaria according to primary case definition 3,4 | Fatal case of severe malaria according to secondary definitions 3,4 | |
| Death due to any cause5 | Death due to medical cause5,6 | |
1 Severe anaemia is defined as Hb <8 g/dL and very severe anaemia is defined as Hb <5 g/dL according to WHO/IVR report (WHO/IVR Malaria Vaccine Advisory Committee meeting 2004)
2 Excludes planned, surgical and trauma related admissions
3 Refer to [23] for primary and secondary definitions of severe malaria
4 Restricted to children fully evaluated as inpatients and excludes diagnoses made by verbal autopsy
5 Includes deaths in hospital and in the community
6 Excludes trauma, which may be diagnosed by verbal autopsy
7 A blood culture taken within 72 h of admission is considered positive if: a definite pathogen is isolated or a bacteria that could be either a pathogen or a contaminant is isolated within 48 hours of incubation and is considered clinically to be a likely pathogen [23].