Vaccine
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Comparative Study
Immunogenicity of aerosol measles vaccine given as the primary measles immunization to nine-month-old Mexican children.
Aerosol measles vaccination has been found to be more immunogenic than subcutaneous administration as a booster in school aged children, and immunogenic in 12-month-old children as a primary dose. The objective of the study was to evaluate immunogenicity to aerosol measles vaccine in 9-month-old children. ⋯ The proportion of 9-month-old infants who developed cellular and/or humoral immunity to measles was lower in the aerosol group but measles antibody and T cell responses were comparable among those who developed measles immunity. Differences in response rates are attributable to the lower aerosol dose. Improving aerosol delivery or increasing the dose may enhance immunogenicity of primary aerosol measles vaccination in this age group.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Comparison of the safety and immunogenicity of hepatitis B virus surface antigen co-administered with an immunostimulatory phosphorothioate oligonucleotide and a licensed hepatitis B vaccine in healthy young adults.
Many individuals do not respond to a three-dose series of hepatitis B vaccine (HBV) and most do not achieve a protective antibody response until after dose 2 or 3. ⋯ Protective levels are achieved more quickly and after fewer doses of HBV-ISS than Engerix-B. HBV-ISS is well tolerated but associated with more mild injection-site tenderness than Engerix-B.