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Concomitant Medication ×
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
  1. 1. Klinische Studie
  2. 2. Routinedokumentation
  3. 3. Register-/Kohortenstudien
  4. 4. Qualitätssicherung
  5. 5. Datenstandard
  6. 6. Patientenfragebogen
  7. 7. Medizinische Fachrichtung
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- 28.08.19 - 1 Formular, 3 Itemgruppen, 14 Datenelemente, 1 Sprache
Itemgruppen: 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.
- 04.08.19 - 1 Formular, 18 Itemgruppen, 151 Datenelemente, 1 Sprache
Itemgruppen: Logs and Repeats, Logs and Repeats - Adverse event/ Concomitant Medication/ Repeat Assessment Check Questions, Non-serious Adverse Event (AE), Serious Adverse Events (SAE), Serious Adverse Event - Concomitant Medication, Serious Adverse Event - Medical Conditions/ Risk Factors, Serious Adverse Events - Relevant diagnostic results, Serious Adverse Events - Investigational Products, Serious Adverse Events - General narrative comments, Serious Adverse Events - Non clinical, Concomitant Medication, Urinalysis - Local, Electronically Transferred Lab Data, Vital signs - Semi-supine, Vital Signs - Standing, 12-Lead ECG, ECG Abnormalities, Repeat Pharmacokinetics Blood - GSK618334
- 20.07.19 - 1 Formular, 2 Itemgruppen, 17 Datenelemente, 1 Sprache
Itemgruppen: Administrative documentation, Concomitant Medications

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