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Combination conjugate vaccines

Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, 2006
Increasingly, more diseases are becoming vaccine preventable, but maintaining community and provider acceptance demands that the number of injections does not increase. Combination conjugate vaccines represent an inevitable and important advance. This paper reviews the efficacy and safety of combination conjugate vaccines, including immunological ...
Jim Buttery, Naor Bar-Zeev
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Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2001
Pneumococcal infections account for a significant proportion of bacterial infections in infants and children. The growing threat from pneumococci resistant to penicillin and other antimicrobials has led to increased pressure for the development of an effective vaccine.
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Conjugated Heptavalent Pneumococcal Vaccine

The Annals of Pharmacotherapy, 2002
OBJECTIVE: To review the immunogenicity, efficacy, and safety of the heptavalent conjugated pneumococcal vaccine (PCV7). DATA SOURCES: A MEDLINE search (1993–August 2001) of research limited to humans published in the English language was conducted. STUDY SELECTION: Findings from randomized, controlled, multicenter trials were reviewed.
Vinita B. Pai   +2 more
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Meningococcal conjugate vaccines

Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy, 2005
Disease caused by Neisseria meningitidis is associated with high mortality rates and significant sequelae. Polysaccharide meningococcal vaccines have been available for > 20 years, and have been used in travellers to control outbreaks, and in some countries for adolescents entering college, although they provide only a short duration of immunity and do
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Glycoprotein conjugate vaccines

Vaccine, 1999
The polysaccharide capsule which surrounds bacterial species like Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, Salmonella typhi, is a potent virulence factor. It protects the bacterium from phagocytosis, but capsule specific antibodies plus complement binding to the capsule opsonise the organism for phagocytosis and ...
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Early immunization with conjugate vaccines

Vaccine, 1998
Conjugate vaccines have been used during the neonatal period or in early infancy in order to test their safety and immunologic behaviour. Adverse events even in neonates and premature babies have been mild and spontaneously resolving. Anticapsular antibody concentrations after first doses of Hib conjugates in early infancy are generally low, but ...
Helena Käyhty, Juhani Eskola
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[Conjugate vaccines].

Revue medicale de Bruxelles, 2002
Conjugate vaccines extend the vaccinal prevention for children to more diseases. Conjugating the capsular polysaccharide to a carrier protein transforms a T-independent antigen in a T-dependent, allowing protection of the children (before 2 years of age) against Haemophilus influenzae type b, meningococcal C and pneumococcal infections.
B, Swennen, J, Sternon
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The promise of conjugate vaccines for Africa

Vaccine, 2007
Capsular polysaccharide (PS) vaccines against Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae have proven safe and effective. Moreover, experience with N. meningitidis, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and S. pneumoniae conjugate vaccines has demonstrated that immunogenicity of PS vaccines can be greatly improved by chemical conjugation to a ...
Marie Paule Kieny, F. Marc LaForce
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Polysaccharide Conjugate Typhoid Vaccine

New England Journal of Medicine, 2001
There is a growing appreciation of the huge health threat posed by increasingly resistant infectious diseases, especially in tropical areas of the developing world.
Richard L. Guerrant, Margaret Kosek
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Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccines

1995
The development of multivalent pneumococcal vaccines for the prevention of both systemic and noninvasive pneumococcal diseases in infants, older adults, and immunecompromised individuals has gained increasing importance over the last decade. The rising cost of medical care has renewed interest in prevention instead of cure for a disease and in many ...
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