This is an open-label phase IV, randomized controlled trial of mOPV2 alone and mOPV2 along with IPV. This trial will assess the impact on type 2 immunogenicity by reducing the interval between mOPV2 doses. The trial will also evaluate any difference in immunogenicity when the first dose of mOPV2, in a two dose schedule with a four week interval, is administered simultaneously with IPV.
The Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) has recommended a phased cessation of OPVs starting with serotype 2 (OPV2). This is because the last case of type 2 wild poliovirus (WPV2) was reported in 1999 and type 2 vaccine poliovirus is associated with the highest risk of causing paralysis due to reversion to vaccine derived poliovirus (VDPV), in which the reverted virus acquires not only the ability to cause paralysis but also the ability to transmit from person-to-person. Withdrawal of OPV2 will be done through the replacement worldwide of trivalent OPV (tOPV) with bivalent (types 1 and 3) OPV (bOPV) for use in routine immunization and in campaigns. After the tOPV to bOPV switch, there will be strict biosafety requirements for the use of vaccines containing OPV2. Trivalent OPV will no longer exist and use of monovalent OPV2 (mOPV2) will be limited to responding to a type 2 outbreak. To respond to poliovirus type 2 outbreaks, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative has proposed delivering using mOPV2 in campaigns conducted in the primary zone of the outbreak and IPV in campaigns conducted in areas adjacent to outbreak zone. Therefore, mOPV2 will be a critical component of response to poliovirus type 2 outbreaks. Typically, polio campaigns are conducted at an interval of 4 weeks. Recently, a clinical trial conducted by icddr,b and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Matlab and Mirpur in Bangladesh demonstrated non-inferiority of type 1 seroconversion after bOPV or mOPV1 at a 2 week interval compared to 4 weeks between doses. Based these findings, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) concluded that the immune response to "OPV is satisfactory when the interval between doses is shortened to 14 or even 7 days (in case of mOPV1)" and has used short-interval campaigns to deliver mOPV1 and bOPV in areas with security-limited access and for outbreak response. However, there are no data and no current or planned polio clinical trials are assessing the impact on immunogenicity of mOPV2 of a reduction in the interval between mOPV2 doses or of administration of mOPV2 in combination with IPV. Therefore, the findings from the trial proposed in this protocol have a direct and immediate implication on strategies to respond to type 2 polio outbreaks. Field site: The study will be carried out in urban slums in Mirpur and Mohakahli in Dhaka.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
760
Participants assigned to this intervention will receive a dose of monovalent oral type 2 polio vaccine (mOPV2) at 6 and 7 weeks of age
Participants assigned to this intervention will receive a dose of monovalent oral type 2 polio vaccine (mOPV2) at 6 and 8 weeks of age
Participants assigned to this intervention will receive a dose of monovalent oral type 2 polio vaccine (mOPV2) at 6 and 10 weeks of age
International Center for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Assessment of type 2 immunogenicity
To assess type 2 immunogenicity seroconversion will be determined in each study arm. Seroconversion will be defined as either a four-fold increase from the titer predicted after accounting for the expected decline in maternal antibodies, assuming a half-life of 28 days, or a seronegative participant (\<1:8 titers) who becomes seropositive (≥1:8). The antibody titers at 6 weeks of age will be assumed to be the starting point for the expected decline in maternal antibody. The endpoint titer assessment will be 4 weeks after completing study vaccination schedule.
Time frame: The antibody titers 4 weeks after completing the vaccination schedule compared to that at 6 weeks of age.
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Participants assigned to this intervention will receive a dose of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) 6 weeks of age