The Immunogenicity of Varicella-zoster Virus Vaccine in HIV-infected Children
NCT ID: NCT01138215
Last Updated: 2020-07-17
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
60 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2009-06-30
2009-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Sartori AM., University of Sao Paolo in Sep 2004 found that after give two doses of the varicella vaccine in 41 susceptible HIV-infected childrens in CDC class N1 or A1. Seroconversion occurred in 53% and 60% of vaccines after one and two doses, respectively. No significant fall in CD4 T lymphocytes or increase in HIV viral load at eight weeks after vaccination.
Saro H. Armenian, University of Southern California in Nov 2005 administrated single dose of live varicella vaccine to 10 HIV infected children. After vaccination, positive VZV-LPA response was detected in 50% of patients at week 2 and 100% at week 4, remained positive in 90% at week 52. VZV IgG was detected in 11% at week 2, 67% at week 8, only 33% at week 52.
Myron J. Levin, University of Colorado in June 2006-2008 study about the safety and immunogenicity of vaccine in varicella-zoster virus (VZV) naive, HIV-infected children with moderate symptoms and/or more pronounced past or current decreases in CD4+ T cell counts. Recipients (97 children) were stratified into 3 groups : group I - CDC category 1 and immunologic category 1 (least affected group of HIV-infected children), group II - CDC category A, B, or N and immunologic category 2 (CD4% = 15-24), group III : CDC category C and/or immunologic category 3, but at least 3 months prior to vaccination, had achieved clinical category A or N and equivalent of immunologic category 1 (CD4% = 25). After 2 doses of vaccines , 79% of children developed VZV-specific antibody and/or CMI 2 months after vaccine and 83% were responders 1 year after vaccination. Bekker V., Emma Children's Hospital, Netherland in Nov 2006 administered 2 doses of varicella vaccine to 15 VZV-seronegative HIV-1 infected children (total lymphocyte counts \> 700 lymphocytes/microl) and 6 HIV-negative VZV-seronegative. Only 60% of the HIV-1 infected children had VZV-specific Ab after two immunizations, where as 100% of the siblings seroconverted.
Thai HIV infected children usually start antiretroviral late due to limited access to care with more severe suppressed of immune status than children in developed countries. Moreover, VZV vaccine is not in the country guideline and still expensive. We would like to provide VZV prevention for this group of children and to evaluate the VZV antibody response in Thai HIV children after VZV vaccination.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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1
Receive 1 course of VZV vaccine : 2 doses of vaccines with 3 months apart.
VZV vaccination
Dose : 0.5 ml Route : subcutaneous injection (SC)
Interventions
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VZV vaccination
Dose : 0.5 ml Route : subcutaneous injection (SC)
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Aged between 1 to 15 years.
3. CD4 T lymphocyte percentage ≥ 15% or ≥ 200 cell/ml within 6 months at time of enrollment.
4. Written informed consent was obtained from each child's parent or guardian before enrollment.
5. HIV-infected children who age more than 7 years old sign assent.
Exclusion Criteria
2. History of exposure to VZV within 1 month before study entry.
3. Received varicella vaccine.
4. Received immunoglobulin or blood product within 3 months before study entry.
5. Using oral steroid or immunosuppressive drugs within 3 months before study entry.
6. History of hypersensitivity to vaccine component (Neomycin).
1 Year
15 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Chulalongkorn University
OTHER
The HIV Netherlands Australia Thailand Research Collaboration
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Department of Pediatrics, Chulalongkorn University
Bangkok, , Thailand
Countries
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Related Links
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HIV Netherlands Australia Thailand Research Collaboration (HIV-NAT)
Other Identifiers
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HIV-NAT 111
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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