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Oral Cholera Vaccine Efficacy and Effectiveness

Katerina Rok Song, Jacqueline Kyungah Lim, Se Eun Park, Tarun Saluja,Sung-Il Cho, Tram Anh Wartel,Julia Lynch

VACCINES(2021)

Cited 15|Views16
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Abstract
Although measuring vaccine efficacy through the conventional phase III study design, randomized, double-blinded controlled trial serves as the "gold standard", effectiveness studies, conducted in the context of a public health program, seek to broaden the understanding of the impact of a vaccine in a real world setting including both individual and population level impacts. Cholera is an acute diarrheal infection caused by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. Since the 1980s, either killed or live oral cholera vaccines (OCVs) have been developed and efficacy and effectiveness studies have been conducted on OCV. Although the results of OCV effectiveness studies sometimes showed outliers, the tendency seen is for effectiveness of the vaccine used in public health settings to be somewhat higher than estimated in randomized controlled trials due to the influence of indirect herd protection. Efficacy and Effectiveness studies both generate important information about the vaccine performance characteristics and its impact when used in real world populations at risk for the disease.
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Key words
vaccine efficacy,vaccine effectiveness,oral cholera vaccine (OCV),cholera,prevention,vaccine
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