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NCT04486638
The primary objective of this study is to assess maternal, obstetrical, pregnancy, and neonatal and infant outcomes among women and their offspring(s) vaccinated with Dengvaxia during their pregnancy
NCT06741683
Dengue fever is caused by an infection with the dengue virus. Vaccination with TDV can help prevent dengue fever. The main purpose of this study is to learn about TDV's ability to create an immune response in adults, adolescents, and children administered. In this study, participants will receive 2 vaccinations with TDV (the second 3 months after the first). During the study, participants will visit their study clinic 5 times. Participants will be in this study for approximately 270 days (9 months).
NCT04514107
This is a cluster randomized controlled trial (CRCT) to evaluate the efficacy of Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquito releases in reducing the burden of ARBV infection in Brazil over four years. The intervention will be the release of Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquitoes. Standard control measures routinely established by the Belo Horizonte City Hall as recommended by the PNCD, will continue to be performed by the Belo Horizonte Health Department (Zoonoses Management) in all clusters, that is, the standard control measures will be carried out throughout the city of Belo Horizonte, independent of this clinical study. Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti will be deployed by releasing adult mosquitoes in pre-determined, thoroughly spaced release points in easily accessible roads described in a release map. A release map will be generated for each cluster and the numbers of release points will be determined by population density, surface area and mosquito abundance. Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquitoes will be deployed across intervention clusters in two stages: 1) a 4 month establishment stage in which most of the releases will occur and 2) followed by an 8 month consolidation stage in which the abundance of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes will be measured and remedial deployments will be completed, if needed, with the aim of achieving a high prevalence of Wolbachia amongst A. aegypti mosquitoes in intervention clusters within 12 months from the start of the release. The goal is to reach a Wolbachia prevalence of 60% or higher. Monitoring of Wolbachia prevalence in the cluster will continue throughout the study period, but no further mosquito deployments will occur after the consolidation stage is complete. The primary objective is to evaluate whether release of Wolbachia-infected Aedes aegypti mosquitoes plus standard Aedes vector control measures reduces the sero-incidence of ARBV infection compared to standard Aedes vector control measures alone.
NCT07205848
This study evaluates the awareness of dengue fever and preventive measures among Sudanese people during the war. It assesses knowledge, awareness, implementation of prevention, access to healthcare, community involvement, and the link between knowledge and practice. The findings aim to enhance disease control strategies in conflict settings.
NCT07203183
The objective of this study is to collect well-characterized serum and plasma specimens from confirmed dengue positive and dengue negative subjects to support dengue diagnostic products development.
NCT07007585
This 3-year prospective observational study aims to identify clinical and laboratory risk factors associated with hospitalization in patients with confirmed dengue virus infection. It also seeks to analyze real-world transfusion practices and their outcomes. The study will be conducted in a second-level hospital in northern Mexico and will follow patients from emergency department entry to clinical resolution or hospital discharge.
NCT07112846
Exanthematous fevers are a global public health problem. The spread of arboviruses due to various factors, including climate change, has resulted in major epidemics such as the one that occurred in Brazil in 2024, representing an extremely concerning scenario from both epidemiological and healthcare perspectives. In addition to this, the reemergence of childhood exanthematous diseases in several countries, including Brazil, is alarming and occurs due to declining vaccination coverage and increased migratory movements. These diseases present overlapping clinical symptoms, and their differential diagnosis is often challenging, which, in a context of dengue and Chikungunya epidemics like the current one, may lead to underreporting of diseases such as measles and rubella. This project aims to build a prospective registry of the occurrence of dengue, Chikungunya, measles, and rubella in various healthcare centers in Brazil, in order to better understand the epidemiological scenario, identify clinical variables associated with different diagnoses, and describe healthcare bottlenecks that may hinder proper reporting and identification of these diseases.
NCT06665035
Dengue fever is caused by an infection with the dengue virus. Vaccination with Dengue Tetravalent Vaccine (TDV) can help prevent dengue fever. The purpose of this study is to collect information of vaccination with TDV when given to children younger than 2 years. The main aims of this study are to learn how safe the vaccine is and how well it works to activate a young child's immune system (this is called immunogenicity). Children between the age of 6 and 21 months will receive two vaccinations with either TDV or placebo 3 months apart. Blood samples will be taken before and after the vaccination as well as throughout the study. These are necessary to check how well the vaccine works to activate the immune system. During the study, participants will visit their study clinic 8 times for vaccinations, blood draws and health checks.
NCT07040202
The goal of this research study is to help the investigators better understand serious dengue disease. The investigators will collect clinical information and up to four blood samples from participants with dengue, sepsis, or healthy people. The investigators will perform multiple analyses on the blood samples and compare results between dengue patients and those with sepsis and healthy people.
NCT03999996
The purpose of this study is to describe antibody persistence for each of the 4 dengue serotypes for up to 63 months after the first vaccination in the primary vaccination series for participants from parent trial DEN-315 (NCT03341637) (Mexico) and for up to 36 months after the first vaccination in the primary vaccination series for participants from parent trial DEN-304 (NCT03423173) (United States \[US\]) and to describe the impact of a tetravalent dengue vaccine (TDV) booster dose vs placebo on antibody response for each of the 4 dengue serotypes at 1 month and 6 months post administration of the TDV booster or placebo.
NCT06388785
The main aim of this study is to collect the number and type of medical problems (adverse events) after vaccination with QDENGA in Malaysia and to learn more about such medical problems after vaccination. Another aim of this study is to collect the number of persons vaccinated with QDENGA who need to stay in the hospital because of severe dengue fever. No vaccination will be given as part of this study. The study will only collect data of persons already vaccinated with QDENGA who agree to participate.
NCT06697041
Hypothesis (if any): Not applicable Objectives: To identify factors for progression to severe Dengue in hospitalized patients. Methods: Prospective Observational study
NCT06257810
The differential and systematic diagnosis of malaria, dengue and chikungunya in patients with fever (≥38.5°C) of undetermined etiology would allow the identification of infection by these pathogens and thus limit the inappropriate use of antibiotics (discontinuation or non-initiation) and optimize the clinical management and prognosis of patients.
NCT05967455
Previous studies with one dengue infection in a controlled environment at Upstate generated data that has been important in understanding the clinical signs and symptoms and how a person's body reacts to dengue infection over time. This has helped investigators compare what is seen in the clinic to what is seen in areas where dengue is prevalent. The investigators want to collect similar information when a person gets the same dengue twice in a controlled environment with the hope that this will lead them to a better understanding of the disease. New participants * will receive one inoculation of dengue and then return to the clinic or be contacted by phone over 6 months; * will receive a second inoculation after 6 months and return to the clinic or be contacted by phone for three more months; * will collect saliva at home; * will allow the study team to collect blood and saliva at the clinic visits. Participants who have been in previous dengue inoculation studies at SUNY Upstate * will receive one inoculation of dengue and then return to the clinic or be contacted by phone over 6 months; * will collect saliva at home; * will allow the study team to collect blood and saliva at the clinic visits. All participants will be seen in the clinic every other day for the first three weeks after any inoculation.
NCT04619823
Arboviruses, diseases transmitted to humans by the bite of an insect vector, are a major public health problem, particularly in tropical and sub-tropical countries. In New Caledonia, dengue epidemics are recurrent and may be associated with the co-circulation of other arboviruses such as Zika or chikungunya. The virological determinants which condition the occurrence of these epidemics may be linked to an increased vectorial competence of the vector mosquito Aedes aegypti for a particular viral isolate. In fact, the Aedes aegypti mosquito is infected by making a blood meal on a person infected with an arbovirus. The virus infects its digestive tract, then spreads throughout the mosquito's body until it reaches its salivary glands. The virus is then present in the saliva and will be injected into the human host during a new blood meal. Some viral variants are best transmitted by Aedes aegypti. In general, the study of this vectorial competence is carried out by experiments in the laboratory during which an artificial blood meal composed of mammalian blood (human, rabbit, etc.) is mixed with a viral stock. Carrying out deported blood meals during which blood collected from patients infected with an arbovirus is used to gorge mosquitoes makes it possible to place oneself in experimental conditions as close as possible to the natural cycle of transmission of arboviruses. In the human host, cells of the myeloid lineage present in the peripheral blood constitute preferred targets of replication for arboviruses. At the same time, the peripheral blood cells of patients are activated in response to infection and secrete many soluble factors released into the blood of patients. The study of blood samples from patients infected with arboviruses is therefore of prime importance for understanding both the replicative mechanisms of arboviruses but also the immune response they induce.
NCT03869060
To evaluate the effectiveness of candidate dengue vaccine formulations, it is prudent to develop an appropriate challenge model. This study supports the expansion of the data set of the current Dengue 1 Live Virus Human Challenge (DENV-1-LVHC) model to produce uncomplicated dengue-like illness.
NCT04298138
To evaluate the effectiveness of candidate dengue vaccine formulations, it is prudent to develop an appropriate challenge model. This study will examine the safety and effectiveness of the Dengue 3 Live Virus Human Challenge (DENV-3-LVHC) product and assess the ability of this virus strain to elicit an uncomplicated dengue-like illness.
NCT06255509
A prospective observational study that will be conducted in Tangerang Regency, Indonesia with primary objective to determine the clinical characteristics, specific immune responses, and viral serotypes in patients with confirmed dengue virus infection in Tangerang District, Indonesia.
NCT04313244
The purpose of the study is to demonstrate the non-inferiority (NI) of the immune response to 2 doses of 9vHPV vaccine, 1 co-administered with TDV, compared with 2 doses of 9vHPV vaccine administered alone.
NCT04023708
Primary Objective: To evaluate the safety of CYD-TDV in pregnant women and their offsprings inadvertently exposed during pregnancy or up to 30 days preceding their last menstrual period (LMP) with regards to maternal, pregnancy, birth, neonatal and infant outcomes. Specifically, the frequency/rates of these outcomes will be: (i) described, and (ii) compared with population-level background incidence rates prior to the introduction of CYD-TDV immunization (i.e., external unvaccinated comparator). Secondary Objective: To describe: * the characteristics of women exposed to CYD-TDV during pregnancy or up to 30 days before the LMP * the characteristics of CYD-TDV pregnancy exposure with regards to number of doses, dose intervals, and trimester of exposure.