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- 2019-09-03 - 1 Formulär, 6 Item-grupper, 30 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus, Other bacteria, Investigator Signature
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV-DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains information on the microbiology results of the swab samples taken at Visits 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 (identical for all cohorts).
- 2021-09-27 - 1 Formulär, 6 Item-grupper, 45 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Clinical HIV staging, HIV infection WHO clinical stage 1, HIV infection WHO clinical stage 2, HIV infection WHO clinical stage 3, HIV infection WHO clinical stage 4
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV-DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form is used for recording clinical symptoms of HIV as well as staging the disease, is only applicable to HIV-positive infants and is to be filled in at Visits 1, 5, 8 and 10.
- 2019-10-17 - 1 Formulär, 7 Item-grupper, 23 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Study Continuation, Elimination Criteria during Study, Informed Consent Amendment 1 / 2, Weight, Meningitis, Breastfeeding
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV-DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains the Study Continuation Check and (if applicable) information on why the subject was withdrawn from the study, the Elimination Criteria Check, information on whether the ICF Amendment has been signed, the subject's weight, and whether the child experienced a meningitis, and is to be filled in at Visits 2 to 10, for all cohorts. Additionally, this form records whether the infant is still breastfed, which is only applicable to HIV-negative subjects with HIV-positive mothers (=HIV-exposed cohort).
- 2019-09-02 - 1 Formulär, 2 Item-grupper, 9 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Study Continuation
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV-DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains an additional Study Continuation Check that is only to be used at Visit 1 in the HIV-positive and HIV-negative, HIV-exposed cohorts (i.e. those infants who had an additional Screening Visit). All cohorts have a more comprehensive Study Continuation Form that is to be used from Visit 2 onwards.
- 2019-08-28 - 1 Formulär, 3 Item-grupper, 13 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Screening conclusion, Investigator's Signature
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form is to be filled in at the Screening Visit, which is only applicable for HIV-infected and HIV-exposed uninfected infants (i.e. infants born from a HIV positive mother). Infants referred to the study with a documented HIV DNA-PCR result performed at other facilities will be eligible for the study without additional HIV Screening.
- 2019-10-17 - 1 Formulär, 14 Item-grupper, 68 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Section 1: General SAE information, Section 2: Seriousness, Section 3: Demography Data, Section 4: SAE recurrence, Section 5: Possible Causes of SAE Other Than Investigational Product(s), Section 6: Relevant Medical Conditions, Section 7: Other Relevant Risk Factors, Section 8: Relevant Concomitant Medications, Section 9: Details of investigational product(s), Section 10: Details of Relevant Assessments, Section 11: Narrative Remarks, Section 12: SAE additional / follow-up information, Investigator's signature
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form is to be used in case of a Serious Adverse Event (SAE), which is here defined as: A serious adverse event (SAE) is any untoward medical occurrence that: a. results in death, b. is life-threatening, NOTE: The term 'life-threatening' in the definition of 'serious' refers to an event in which the subject was at risk of death at the time of the event. It does not refer to an event, which hypothetically might have caused death, if it were more severe. c. requires hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, NOTE: In general, hospitalization signifies that the subject has been detained (usually involving at least an overnight stay) at the hospital or emergency ward for observation and/or treatment that would not have been appropriate in the physician’s office or out-patient setting. Complications that occur during hospitalization are AEs. If a complication prolongs hospitalization or fulfils any other serious criteria, the event is serious. When in doubt as to whether “hospitalization” occurred or was necessary, the AE should be considered serious. Hospitalization for elective treatment of a pre-existing condition that did not worsen from baseline is not considered an AE. d. results in disability/incapacity, or NOTE: The term disability means a substantial disruption of a person’s ability to conduct normal life functions. This definition is not intended to include experiences of relatively minor medical significance such as uncomplicated headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, influenza, and accidental trauma (e.g. sprained ankle) which may interfere or prevent everyday life functions but do not constitute a substantial disruption. e. is a congenital anomaly/birth defect in the offspring of a study subject. f. Medical or scientific judgement should be exercised in deciding whether reporting is appropriate in other situations, such as important medical events that may not be immediately lifethreatening or result in death or hospitalization but may jeopardize the subject or may require medical or surgical intervention to prevent one of the other outcomes listed in the above definition. These should also be considered serious. Examples of such events are invasive or malignant cancers, intensive treatment in an emergency room or at home for allergic bronchospasm, blood dyscrasias or convulsions that do not result in hospitalization. Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) related to study participation (e.g. procedures, invasive tests, change from existing therapy) or SAEs related to GSK concurrent medication will be collected and recorded from the time the subject consents to participate in the study. For all other SAEs, the standard time period for collecting and recording SAEs will begin from the administration of the first dose of vaccine / placebo / comparator and will end minimum 30 days (see protocol) following administration of the last dose of vaccine / placebo / comparator for each subject.
- 2019-10-17 - 1 Formulär, 4 Item-grupper, 42 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Solicited Adverse Events - Local Symptoms, Solicited Adverse Events - General Symptoms, Unsolicited Adverse Events
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains information on solicited adverse events (local and general symptoms ) in the first 3 days after the study vaccinations, as well as whether the subject has experienced unsolicited (serious) adverse events. Details of unsolicited adverse events are to be given in a different form. This form is to be filled in after the vaccination Visits, i.e. Visits 1, 2, 3 and 8 (all cohorts) and additionally Visit 5 for all cohorts except for the 3+0 schedule without the booster vaccination in HIV-negative subjects.
- 2019-09-03 - 1 Formulär, 6 Item-grupper, 53 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Local Symptoms (at injection sites), Other local symptoms, General Symptoms, Other General Symptoms, Concomitant Medication
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains the Diary Cards, in which parents/guardians should record local and general symptoms in the first 3 days after the study vaccinations, as well as medication taken since the vaccination. These forms are handed out after the vaccination Visits, i.e. Visits 1, 2, 3 and 8 (all cohorts) and additionally Visit 5 for all cohorts except for the 3+0 schedule without the booster vaccination in HIV-negative subjects. These Diary Cards are transcribed by the investigator, resulting in the Solicited/Unsolicited AE form as well as (part of) the Concomitant Medication form.
- 2019-09-03 - 1 Formulär, 3 Item-grupper, 21 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Study Conclusion, Investigator's Signature
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains the Study Conclusion and is to be used twice - at the interim analysis at/after Visit 6 and at the final analysis at the end of the study (or if the subject has been withdrawn).
- 2019-08-28 - 1 Formulär, 3 Item-grupper, 16 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Non-Serious Adverse Events, Non-Serious Adverse Events Details
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains information on non-serious adverse events other than the solicited adverse events, which are recorded in a different form, occuring up to 30 days post vaccination. Please report serious adverse events only on the Serious Adverse Event (SAE) reports. This NSAE form is to be filled in at the Interim Analysis at/after Visit 6 and the End of Study Analysis at/after Visit 10.
- 2019-08-28 - 1 Formulär, 3 Item-grupper, 14 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Concomitant Medication, Concomitant Medication Details
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains information on concomitant medication the subject has received, which should be recorded at the Interim Analysis at/after Visit 6 and at the End of Study Analysis at/after Visit 10. At each study visit/contact, the investigator should question the subject's parent(s)/guardian(s) about any medication(s) taken. All concomitant medication, with the exception of vitamins and/or dietary supplements, administered at ANY time during the period starting with administration of each dose of the study vaccines and ending one month (minimum 30 days) after each dose of the study vaccines are to be recorded with generic name of the medication (trade names are allowed for combination drugs, i.e. multi-component drugs), medical indication, total daily dose, route of administration, start and end dates of treatment. Anti-retroviral therapy taken at any time during the entire study period is to be recorded with generic name of the medication (trade names are allowed for combination drugs only), medical indication, total daily dose, route of administration, start and end dates of treatment. Any treatments and/or medications specifically contraindicated, e.g., any immunoglobulins, other blood products and any immune modifying drugs administered since birth or at any time during the study period are to be recorded with generic name of the medication (trade names are allowed for combination drugs only), medical indication, total daily dose, route of administration, start and end dates of treatment. During the period starting with the administration of each dose of the study vaccines and ending one month (minimum 30 days) after each dose of the study vaccines, concomitant medication administered for the treatment of a non-serious AE must be recorded with generic name of the medication (trade names are allowed for combination drugs only), medical indication (including which AE), total daily dose, route of administration, start and end dates of treatment. Similarly, concomitant medication administered for the treatment of an SAE, at any time, must be recorded on the SAE Form, as applicable.
- 2019-08-28 - 1 Formulär, 3 Item-grupper, 9 Dataelement, 1 Språk
Item-grupper: Administrative documentation, Concomitant Vaccination , Concomitant Vaccination Details
Study ID: 111634 Clinical Study ID: 111634 Study Title: A phase III, open, controlled study in South Africa to assess the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of GSK Biologicals’ 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered as a 3-dose (6, 10, 14 weeks) primary immunization course in HIV infected infants, HIV exposed uninfected infants and HIV unexposed uninfected infants followed by a booster vaccination at 9-10 months of age. Patient Level Data: Study Listed on ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00829010 Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline Collaborators: N/A Phase: Phase 3 Study Recruitment Status: Completed Generic Name: Pneumococcal vaccine GSK1024850A Trade Name: Tritanrix-HepB/Hib, Rotarix Study Indication: Infections, Streptococcal This phase III trial studies the immunogenicity, safety and reactogenicity of a 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in three groups of infants that differ by HIV status: HIV-positive infants, HIV-negative infants who are exposed to the virus (by their HIV-positive mother), and HIV-negative infants who are not exposed. The study consists of Screening at 4-8 weeks of age (only for HIV-positive and HIV-exposed infants without HIV DNA test) and 10 subsequent Visits over a period of 23 months. There are five study cohorts: HIV-positive and HIV-exposed participants receive the vaccine at Visits 1, 2, 3 (i.e. 6, 10 and 14 weeks of life; primary course) and 5 (9-10 months of age; booster), whereas HIV-negative, unexposed infants are randomly assigned to one of three vaccination schedules: the aforementioned schedule consisting of the primary course and the booster, or the 3-dose primary course only without the booster vaccination, or a different primary course consisting of only two vaccinations at Visits 1 and 3 (6 and 14 weeks of age) followed by a booster at Visit 5 (9-10 months). Visit 1 is scheduled at 6-10 weeks of life. The interval between Visits 1 and 2, 2 and 3, as well as 3 and 4 has to be 28-42 days each. Visit 5 then takes place at 9-10 months of age. The interval between Visit 5 and 6 again has to be 28-42 days. Visit 7 is scheduled at 12-13 months of age, Visit 8 at 15-18 months, Visit 9 at 16-19 months, and the final Visit 10 is performed when the subjects are 24-27 months old. This form contains information on concomitant vaccinations the subject received in the 30 days preceding the first dose of the study vaccines and during the entire study period and is to be filled in at the Interim Analysis at/after Visit 6 and at the End of Study Analysis at/after Visit 10. OPV and measles vaccinations administered during the entire study period are to be recorded in the “Protocol Required Concomitant Vaccination” form.

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