ab Zangwill 2001.
Methods | Randomised, placebo‐controlled trial to assess safety and reactogenicity of 4 different lots of cold‐adapted influenza vaccine. The aim of the study was to test replicability of lots vs placebo versus a different concentration. | |
Participants | Healthy children aged 12 to 36 months from the Kaiser Permanente paediatric clinic population. Children could be enrolled only in absence of the following conditions: hypersensitivity to eggs, presence of underlying chronic illnesses for which influenza vaccine was recommended, immunodeficiency diseases, acute febrile illnesses within 7 days or upper respiratory illnesses within 3 days of vaccination, prior receipt of inactivated flu vaccine or CAIV‐T, administration of an investigational drug within 1 month of vaccination in this study, administration of any live virus vaccine within 1 month of vaccination in this study, administration of any inactivated vaccine within 2 weeks of vaccination in the study, history of wheezing or bronchodilator medication use within 2 weeks before vaccination, receipt of any blood product within 3 months before vaccination, administration of nasal medication during the first 10 days after vaccination, no telephone in the household. 500 children were enrolled. | |
Interventions | Children were randomised into 5 groups to receive 1 of the following preparations.
Each preparation was given as intranasal spray administered in 2 doses of 0.5 mL (0.25 mL per nostril) about 60 days apart. 500 children were enrolled; 474 children received 2 doses of vaccine or placebo. |
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Outcomes |
Serological
Paired sera for antibody response assessment Effectiveness N/A Safety After vaccination, children were observed for at least 15 minutes and families were provided with digital thermometer and diary cards to record temperature and occurrence of symptoms listed in the card (lethargy, irritability, runny nose/nasal congestion, sore throat, cough, headache, muscle aches, chills, vomiting) for 10 days. Other symptoms or medications taken were also reported. |
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Funding Source | Industry | |
Notes | The authors concluded that all lots of vaccines were safe and immunogenic. The number of children in each arm was not stated in the paper but was obtained through contact with author. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Computer‐generated randomisation list |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Coded |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Double‐blinding |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | |
Summary assessments | Low risk | Plausible bias unlikely to seriously alter the results. |