1. Safety and immunogenicity of a combination measles, mumps, rubella and varicella vaccine (ProQuad).
- Author
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Kuter BJ, Brown ML, Hartzel J, Williams WR, EvesiKaren A, Black S, Shinefield H, Reisinger KS, Marchant CD, Sullivan BJ, Thear M, Klopfer S, Xu J, Gress JO, and Schödel F
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Viral blood, Chickenpox Vaccine immunology, Child, Child, Preschool, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Humans, Infant, Logistic Models, Measles Vaccine immunology, Mumps Vaccine immunology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Rubella Vaccine immunology, Vaccines, Combined adverse effects, Vaccines, Combined immunology, Chickenpox Vaccine adverse effects, Measles Vaccine adverse effects, Mumps Vaccine adverse effects, Rubella Vaccine adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: A combination measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella vaccine (ProQuad, Merck & Co., Inc, West Point, PA) was evaluated in five clinical trials. Use of ProQuad would result in fewer injections for children and would facilitate universal immunization against all four diseases., Objective: To describe the combined results obtained from the studies conducted during the clinical development program for ProQuad., Methods: A total of 5833 healthy children, 12-23 months of age, and 399 healthy children, 4-6 years of age, received 1 or 2 doses of ProQuad in five controlled clinical trials. M-M-R II and VARIVAX were used as the control for most studies. Safety was evaluated for six weeks postvaccination and immunogenicity was assessed six weeks after each dose by a sensitive assay (ELISA or gpELISA)., Results: A single dose of ProQuad in 12- to 23-month-old children was shown to be as immunogenic as a single dose of M-M-R II and VARIVAX and was generally well tolerated. ProQuad can be used concomitantly with other vaccines (hepatitis B and Hoemophilus influenzoe b). A higher rate of fever was reported after 1 dose of ProQuad compared to M-M-R II and VARIVAX, but fever episodes were transient without long-term sequelae. Both a 2-dose regimen of ProQuad in 12- to 23-month-olds and use of ProQuad in place of M-M-R II at 4-6 years were shown to be immunogenic and well tolerated. The incidence of adverse experiences following a second dose of ProQuad was lower than that following the initial dose., Conclusions: A single dose of ProQuad is as immunogenic as M-M-R II and VARIVAX and is well tolerated in a 1- or 2-dose schedule. ProQuad should easily fit into the routine immunization schedule.
- Published
- 2006
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