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Vaccine Campaign Effects on General Hospital Admissions and Mortality Among Children

A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial on the Campaign Effect of Measles Vaccine and Oral Polio Vaccine on General Hospital Admissions and Mortality Among Children

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03460002
Acronym
RE-CAMP
Enrollment
28612
Registered
2018-03-09
Start date
2016-11-30
Completion date
2022-08-31
Last updated
2024-09-03

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Measles Vaccination, Oral Polio Vaccine, Non-specific/Heterologous Effects of Vaccines, Mortality, Morbidity, Children

Keywords

Measles vaccine, Oral polio vaccine, Campaign, Child mortality, Child morbidity, Non-specific effects

Brief summary

The world is set on eradicating measles and polio infections in the coming decade. Once both infections are under control, campaigns with measles and oral polio vaccines will be phased out. This might do more harm than good for child survival in low-income countries. Studies from the Bandim Health Project in Guinea-Bissau, and elsewhere, have revealed, that the live measles and oral polio vaccines have beneficial non-specific effects, i.e. effects on child morbidity and mortality unrelated to prevention of the targeted diseases. The campaigns are presumed to be most beneficial for children not reached by routine vaccination programs, as they are not already protected. However, studies show that prior routine or campaign vaccination may boost resistance against unrelated infections. If we phase out measles and oral polio campaigns after eradicating their target infections without considering the impact on child survival, the drastic decline in child mortality since 1990 could change direction. We will conduct the first cluster randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effect of measles and oral polio campaigns on general child morbidity and mortality via the Bandim Health Project. Bandim Health Project runs a Health and Demographic Surveillance System in Guinea-Bissau since 1978 and assesses child health interventions' real-life effects, via continuous registration of all interventions given to all children, and follow-up of individuals. We will conduct the trials in rural Guinea-Bissau monitoring all nine health regions. The hypotheses are: RECAMP-MV: Measles vaccination campaign in Guinea-Bissau reduce morbidity and mortality among children between 9 and 59 months of age by 80% during the subsequent 18 months in a context of limited measles infection. RECAMP-OPV: Oral polio vaccination campaigns in Guinea-Bissau reduce morbidity and mortality among children between 0 and 8 months of age by 25% during the subsequent 12 months in a context with no polio infection. Originally, the trials were meant to be implemented in 182 clusters, enrolling 21000 children. Following revised sample size calculations and discussions with the Data Safety and Monitoring Board, the number of clusters were increased to 222 and the planned number of enrolments increased from 21,000 to 28,000 (RECAMP-MV: 18000, RECAMP-OPV: 10000). To explore the hypothesis that at least part of the beneficial non-specific effects of OPV is driven by changes in the gut and/or respiratory microbiome, we will collect microbiome samples in a sub-group: A nasal swab and a rectal swab will be collected from 50 infants allocated to the intervention group, and 50 infants allocated to the control group. Two sample will be collected for each infant one when recruited for RECAMP-OPV and a second two months later.

Interventions

BIOLOGICALMeasles vaccine

A measles vaccine prequalified from the World Health Organization will be administered in one dose by deep subcutaneous injection into the left subscapular region by a local nurse.

A bivalent oral polio vaccine prequalified by the World Health Organization will be administered in one or two doses directly into the mouth of the vaccinee with two drops per dose by a local nurse.

Sponsors

Statens Serum Institut
CollaboratorOTHER
Research Center for Vitamins and Vaccines
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Bandim Health Project
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE (Caregiver)

Intervention model description

The RECAMP trials test two separate hypotheses relating to the potential beneficial non-specific effects of providing live vaccines in general vaccination campaigns. The RECAMP-MV trial tests the effect of a Measles Vaccination campaign among children aged 9-59 months The RECAMP-OPV trial tests the effect of an Oral Polio Vaccination campaign in children aged 0-8 months

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
0 Months to 59 Months
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Children aged 0-59 months living with families registered in the rural Bandim Health Project Health and Demographic Surveillance Site are included, provided a parent/guardian consent.

Exclusion criteria

* the child has temperature \> 39.0◦C or a severe acute illness as defined by the examining nurse OR * the child has as a mid upper arm circumference \< 110 mm and is older than 6 months (most feasible local indicator of AIDS and chronic immunosuppressive disease) OR * the child has experienced a severe allergic reaction after previous vaccination, drug or food. OR * the child is enrolled in an ongoing study of Bacillus Calmette Guerin vaccine and is \< 2 months old OR * For the RECAMP-MV trial: the child is enrolled in RECAMP-OPV

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Composite outcome: mortality and hospital admission (measured as a rate)Enrolment to end of study (longest follow-up 2 years)Death (registered through follow-up visits, verified by verbal autopsies) or first admission (overnight stay at hospital registered by interview at follow up visits) Correction: Non-accidental death (registered through follow-up visits, verified by verbal autopsies) or first admission not caused by accident (overnight stay at hospital registered by interview at follow up visits) The outcomes were correctly specified in the protocol paper and analysis plan (doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-7813-y)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Nutritional statusEnrolment to end of study (longest follow-up 2 years)Mid-upper-arm-circumference registered with measurement tape as per UNICEF recommendations
MortalityEnrolment to end of study (longest follow-up 2 years)Death (registered through follow-up visits, verified by verbal autopsies) Corrections: Non-accidental death (registered through follow-up visits, verified by verbal autopsies) The outcome was correctly specified in the protocol paper and analysis plan (doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-7813-y)
Hospital admissionEnrolment to end of study (longest follow-up 2 years)admission (overnight stay at hospital registered by interview at follow up visits) Correction: admission not caused by accident (overnight stay at hospital registered by interview at follow up visits) The outcome was correctly specified in the protocol paper and analysis plan (doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-7813-y)

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Acute adverse reactionsOne-two months after a child is included in the studyHealth center consultations and illness registered through follow-up visits
Changes to the Respiratory and Gut MicrobiomeTwo months after a child is included in the studyAmong 100 children enrolled in the OPV or corresponding control arm (Weighing-OPV), a nasal swab and a rectal swab will be collected at enrolment and 2 months later to assess effects of campaign OPV on the microbiome.

Countries

Guinea-Bissau

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 20, 2026