Publication | Closed Access
Safety and Immunogenicity of Different Immunization Regimens of CVD 103-HgR Live Oral Cholera Vaccine in Soldiers and Civilians in Thailand
117
Citations
20
References
1992
Year
VaccinationVaccine SafetyGeometric Mean TiterVaccine DevelopmentDifferent Immunization RegimensImmunodeficienciesClinical EpidemiologyVaccine TestingAttenuated VibrioVaccine EfficacyInfection ControlPublic HealthMedicineVaccine ResearchClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyBaseline Vibriocidal Titer
Attenuated Vibrio cholerae oral vaccine CVD 103-HgR was well tolerated by 324 Thai soldiers and civilians. Most received a single 5 x 10(8) cfu dose, while 40 each received one or two 5 x 10(9) cfu doses. Vibriocidal antibody (the best correlate of immunity) seroconversion was lower in soldiers than civilians (P less than .001). Increasing the vaccine dose to 5 x 10(9) cfu raised the geometric mean titer (P less than .001). A second 5 x 10(9) cfu dose one week later did not notably increase seroconversions. Likelihood of seroconversion was inversely correlated with baseline vibriocidal titer (P less than .001). CVD 103-HgR caused seroconversion in most subjects with baseline titers less than or equal to 1:40, including 100% of civilians after one 5 x 10(8) cfu dose, 79% of soldiers after one 5 x 10(9) cfu dose, and 45% of soldiers after one 5 x 10(8) cfu dose. In persons with elevated baseline titers, vibriocidal antibody seroconversion is not a sensitive measure of whether vaccine has boosted intestinal immunity; for such subjects, other measurements must be used. Study regimens in endemic areas should use a single 5 x 10(9) cfu dose.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1