Revaccination of Young Children With Bacille Calmette Guerin (BCG) Vaccine
BCG Vaccination and Childhood Morbidity and Mortality: Interventions With Possible Implications for the Immunisation Policy in Developing Countries. Revaccination of Young Children With BCG Vaccine.
Sponsor: Bandim Health Project
Terminated
A cluster of deaths in the BCG-arm compared with controls
A PHASE4 clinical study on Malaria, this trial is terminated or withdrawn. The trial is conducted by Bandim Health Project and has accumulated 5 data snapshots since 2002. Infectious disease trials contribute critical data for public health response and treatment development.
Study Description(click to expand)Examine in a randomised trial whether revaccination with BCG reduces childhood mortality after 19 months of age by 30%. Criteria for verification: 3,000 children aged 1½ year enrolled and followed for an average of 3 years; information on potential adverse events among children with a positive PPD reaction; assessment of parasitaemia after revaccination; assessment of the tuberculin response and scar-formation after revaccination; and assessment of all-cause mortality during the period of follow-up. Following consent to participate, children will be assessed for BCG scar and tuberculin reaction at 18-19 months of age. Subsequently, the children will be invited to a clinical examination at one of the health centres. The study will be explained again to the mother, and if she accepts to participate, she will draw a randomisation number deciding whether the child will be revaccinated or not. The BCG vaccine given will be the standard dose of 0.1 ml as recommended by WHO in this age group. In the beginning of the study, a group of 800 revaccinated and not revaccinated children will be followed weekly for two months to monitor morbidity and possible adverse effects of the vaccination. It is not expected that Koch like reactions will be common...
Examine in a randomised trial whether revaccination with BCG reduces childhood mortality after 19 months of age by 30%.
Criteria for verification: 3,000 children aged 1½ year enrolled and followed for an average of 3 years; information on potential adverse events among children with a positive PPD reaction; assessment of parasitaemia after revaccination; assessment of the tuberculin response and scar-formation after revaccination; and assessment of all-cause mortality during the period of follow-up.
Following consent to participate, children will be assessed for BCG scar and tuberculin reaction at 18-19 months of age. Subsequently, the children will be invited to a clinical examination at one of the health centres. The study will be explained again to the mother, and if she accepts to participate, she will draw a randomisation number deciding whether the child will be revaccinated or not. The BCG vaccine given will be the standard dose of 0.1 ml as recommended by WHO in this age group. In the beginning of the study, a group of 800 revaccinated and not revaccinated children will be followed weekly for two months to monitor morbidity and possible adverse effects of the vaccination. It is not expected that Koch like reactions will be common in this age group. However, should there be too many adverse reactions among children with a positive tuberculin test, only tuberculin negative children will be included in the continuation of the trial.
Two months after inclusion, the children will have another tuberculin test to examine changes in tuberculin reaction. At the same time, scar-size will be measured. In the initial phase of the project, a finger-prick blood sample will be collected from 1000 children to examine whether BCG boosting/no boosting have had an effect on the prevalence of malaria parasitaemia and the level of measles antibodies. Children with malaria will be treated and children with non-protective levels of measles antibodies will be offered revaccination with measles vaccine. In a group of children, samples will be collected both before and after BCG revaccination/no revaccination to measure changes in cytokine profile. Children with a large PPD reaction (\> 15mm) will be followed in a similar way as the other children as this may reflect immune stimulation from exposure to natural TB. The studies of morbidity and immunological changes will be done both in the dry and the rainy seasons. The children will be followed for hospitalisations and mortality to 5 years of age.
Status Flow
Change History
5 versions recorded-
Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]
Terminated PHASE4
-
Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Terminated PHASE4
-
Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Terminated PHASE4
-
Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Terminated PHASE4
-
Jan 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Terminated PHASE4
First recorded
Jul 2002
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- Bandim Health Project
- International Cooperation with Developing Countries
- Leiden University Medical Centre, DEPT of Parasitology, Leiden Holland
- Medical Research Council Unit, The Gambia
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .