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This study will aim to recruit at least 70 children who participated in the iMAP2 study whose mothers received a pertussis vaccine in pregnancy as part of the iMAP2 trial and at least 15 children born to mothers who did not receive a pertussis vaccine in pregnancy. Blood samples will be obtained prior to and one month after the routine preschool booster vaccination and vaccine responses compared between children whose mothers received one of two pertussis vaccines or no pertussis vaccine in pregnancy. Children will be vaccinated with the routine booster vaccines by the study team on the same visit as the pre-vaccination bloods are taken.
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In the UK, all pregnant women are offered a whooping cough-containing vaccine during pregnancy. This protects newborn infants against whooping cough, but there have been some concerns that this vaccination in pregnancy may affect the response to childhood vaccinations.
A preceding study called immunising Mums Against Pertussis 2 (iMAP2) was conducted involving pregnant women randomised to receive one of two different whooping cough-containing vaccines, with a control group also recruited, and the antibody levels in their infants were measured at age 2, 5 and 13 months.
This study, immunising Mums Against Pertussis 3 (iMAP3), is a follow up study of children who participated in iMAP2, to investigate the sustained impact of whooping cough vaccination in pregnancy on childhood vaccine responses.
This study will investigate the antibody levels in these children before and after the routine pre-school booster (DTaP/IPV vaccination) vaccine. It will help the Department of Health continue to ensure the best protection is offered to the population.
Those eligible for the study are children who participated in the iMAP2 study who have reached the age for pre-school booster vaccination (from age 3 years 4 months).
The study period will be approximately 4-6 weeks with two study visits. The first visit will take place when the child is around 3 years and 4 months of age. After informed consent a blood sample will be obtained followed by administration of the pre-school booster vaccine. At the second visit another blood sample will be obtained. These blood tests will measure the level of protective antibody against the components of the pre-school booster vaccine. Visits will take place either in the child's home or at a suitable clinical setting within the study team's sites.
The study will be run by St. George's, University of London, in collaboration with St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford Vaccine Group and Bristol Children's Vaccine Centre.
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64 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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