The Karonga Prevention Trial: a leprosy and tuberculosis vaccine trial in Northern Malawi. I: methods of the vaccination phase

In this report the methods of the Karonga Prevention Trial, a double-blind leprosy and tuberculosis vaccine trial in Karonga District, Northern Malaŵi, are described in detail. During a total population house-to-house survey, which lasted from November 1985 until August 1989, 121,008 people (57,892...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Leprosy review 1993-12, Vol.64 (4), p.338-356
Hauptverfasser: PÖNNIGHAUS, J. M, FINE, P. E. M, OXBORROW, S. M, BLISS, L, GRUER, P. J. K, KAPIRA-MWAMONDWE, B, MSOSA, E, REES, R. J. W, CLAYTON, D, PIKE, M. C, STERNE, J. A. C
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:In this report the methods of the Karonga Prevention Trial, a double-blind leprosy and tuberculosis vaccine trial in Karonga District, Northern Malaŵi, are described in detail. During a total population house-to-house survey, which lasted from November 1985 until August 1989, 121,008 people (57,892 males and 63,116 females) were vaccinated. A further 5835 people refused vaccination and 5757 were ineligible for vaccination, 2652 of them because they had a history or signs of leprosy, or because they were suspected to have early leprosy. A total of 66,145 individuals, without evidence of prior BCG vaccination, received one of the following: BCG, BCG + 5 x 10(7) killed Mycobacterium leprae, or BCG + 6 x 10(8) killed M. leprae; 54,863 individuals found with a typical or a doubtful BCG scar received either placebo or BCG, or (from mid-1987 onwards) BCG + 6 x 10(8) killed M. leprae. Side-effects were not looked for systematically, but 4 individuals self-reported with glandular abscesses, 9 with large post-vaccination ulcers (> 25 mm in diameter) and 2 with ulcers which persisted for more than 1 year. BCG vials collected from paraffin refrigerators in the field showed satisfactory concentrations of viable BCG throughout the trial. Post-vaccination skin test (RT23 and M. leprae soluble antigen) results and post-vaccination ulcer rates indicate that few mistakes were made in the field when recording the vaccine codes.
ISSN:0305-7518
2162-8807
DOI:10.5935/0305-7518.19930039