Immunogenicity and effectiveness of post-exposure rabies prophylaxis with a new chromatographically purified Vero-cell rabies vaccine (CPRV): a two-stage randomised clinical trial in the Philippines
Autor: | Cecilia G. Montalban, Sabine Vital, Jean Lang, Beatriz P. Quiambao, Elizabeth Miranda, Valentine Le Mener, Susan C. Wood |
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Rok vydání: | 2000 |
Předmět: |
Adult
medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Rabies Veterinary (miscellaneous) Antibodies Viral medicine.disease_cause Rabies vaccine Double-Blind Method Neutralization Tests Internal medicine Chlorocebus aethiops medicine Animals Humans Horses Prospective Studies Vaccines Combined Seroconversion Child Vero Cells Lyssavirus Aged Chromatography biology business.industry Immunogenicity Rabies virus Immunization Passive Middle Aged Rhabdoviridae biology.organism_classification medicine.disease Virology Vaccination Infectious Diseases Rabies Vaccines Child Preschool Insect Science Parasitology business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Acta Tropica. 75:39-52 |
ISSN: | 0001-706X |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0001-706x(99)00092-3 |
Popis: | Recent improvements in chromatographic purification procedures have made it possible to develop a new chromatographically purified rabies vaccine (CPRV) by further purifying the current rabies vaccine prepared from Vero-cell culture (PVRV) (Verorab™; Pasteur Merieux Connaught). The immunogenicity and effectiveness of post-exposure rabies prophylaxis with this new vaccine were evaluated in a two-stage clinical trial conducted in the Philippines. In both study stages, post-exposure treatment consisted of five injections of vaccine [(D)ays 0, 3, 7, 14, 28], together with a dose of rabies immunoglobulin (RIG) of equine or human origin on D0. In stage 1, 231 subjects with low-risk rabies exposure (WHO category I or II), and who had a negative ERIG skin test, were treated with either CPRV (n=114) or PVRV (n=117). By D14, all subjects in each group had achieved rabies antibody titres over ten times that recommended by the WHO as indicating seroconversion (≥0.5 IU/ml). The kinetics of the immune response to vaccination were very similar in the two groups, and at D28, the immunogenicity of CPRV was equivalent to that of PVRV (one-sided equivalence test). Following these positive results, 132 subjects with severe rabies exposure were included in the second stage of this trial. All were scheduled to receive four vaccine doses with CPRV. After D14, only those 57 patients with confirmed rabies exposure (animal with positive FA test) and seven patients for whom rabies exposure could not be excluded (animal lost or not tested) completed the treatment and were followed for one year to assess survival. After 1 year, 62 patients treated for confirmed or possible severe rabies exposure had been examined and were still alive. Two patients contacted by letter and telephone confirmed good health 7 and 16 months after exposure. No severe local or systemic reactions were reported in either stage of the study, and no treatment-related serious adverse event occurred. This two-stage clinical trial attests to the safety and satisfactory immunogenicity of CPRV in post-exposure rabies treatment, and confirms the effectiveness of a new rabies vaccine in patients with severe confirmed exposure. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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