Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications (Jun 2019)

Clinical study of safety and immunogenicity of pentavalent DTP-HB-Hib vaccine administered by disposable-syringe jet injector in India

  • Ashish Bavdekar,
  • Nandini Malshe,
  • Latha Ravichandran,
  • Amita Sapru,
  • Anand Kawade,
  • Sanjay Lalwani,
  • Sonali Palkar,
  • Neeta Hanumante,
  • Bhagwat Gunale,
  • Dhananjay Kapse,
  • Amol Chaudhari,
  • Tara Miller,
  • Laura Saganic,
  • Courtney Jarrahian,
  • Sarah McGray,
  • Darin Zehrung,
  • Prasad S. Kulkarni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Introduction: We conducted a randomized, observer-blind, non-inferiority, parallel-group clinical study of diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, hepatitis B, and Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate (pentavalent) vaccination of infants in India. Goals were to determine whether the seropositivity rate after vaccination via disposable-syringe jet injector (DSJI) was non-inferior to that via needle and syringe (N-S), and to compare the safety of vaccination by the two methods. Methods: Healthy children received a three-dose series of vaccine intramuscularly by DSJI or N-S beginning at 6–8 weeks of age. Immunoglobulin G antibody levels were measured by ELISA at 4–6 weeks after the third dose. The main secondary endpoint was safety, measured as injection site and systemic reactions. Discussion: The study was stopped early out of caution beyond that specified in the protocol stopping criteria, after the Data Safety Committee noted a higher frequency of injection site reactions, especially moderate and severe, in the DSJI group. As a result, 128 subjects—DSJI group 61; N-S group 67—completed the study, rather than the 340 planned, and the study was not sufficiently powered to compare immunogenicity endpoints for the groups. Descriptive statistics indicate that seropositivity induced by vaccination with the DSJI was similar to that of N-S for all five antigens. Pentavalent vaccine includes whole-cell pertussis vaccine and an aluminum adjuvant, which may have contributed to the higher number of local reactions with the DSJI. The reactions caused no serious or long-term sequelae, and may be more acceptable in other populations or circumstances.US National Institutes of Health clinical trials identifier: NCT02409095. Keywords: DTP-HB-Hib vaccine, Jet injector, DSJI, Vaccine adjuvant, Immunogenicity, Injection site reactions