Pharmacists as Immunizers to Improve Coverage and Provider/Recipient Satisfaction: A Prospective, Controlled Community Embedded Study With Vaccines With Low Coverage Rates (The Improve ACCESS Study)
This project proposes to implement and compare new community pharmacy-based strategies for improving vaccine coverage.
Long-term Persistence of Hepatitis B and Pertussis Antibody Responses in Healthy 4 to 5 Year-Old Children Previously Vaccinated With a 2-Dose or 3-Dose Infants Series and Toddler Dose With Vaxelis® or INFANRIX® Hexa
This is a multicenter extension study of two European randomized, double-blind studies (V419-007 and V419-008). It describes long-term persistence of hepatitis B and pertussis antibody responses in healthy 4- to 5 year old children previously vaccinated with Vaxelis® or INFANRIX® hexa
The Impact of Lixisenatide on Postprandial Glucose Tolerance in Pancreatectomised Subjects -a Delineation of Extrapancreatic Effects
Postprandial glucose (PPG) excursions are not only determined by insulin-mediated glucose disposal and endogenous glucose production (regulated by insulin and glucagon); also the rate of gastric emptying constitutes an important determinant of PPG levels 1. The short-acting glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist lixisenatide is used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes. It increases glucose-dependent insulin secretion, suppresses glucagon secretion and reduces gastric emptying of meals 2. These three mechanisms most likely constitute the weightiest mechanisms behind the potent impact of lixisenatide on exaggerated PPG excursions in patients with type 2 diabetes - which often are normalised during lixisenatide treatment 3. However, the separate impact of lixisenatide-induced reduction of gastric emptying (independently of the pancreatic effects) has been difficult to determine. Importantly, treatment with lixisenatide also decreases appetite and food intake and may, like native GLP-1, increase energy expenditure 4. So far an exact demarcation of the pancreatic and extrapancreatic effects of lixisenatide in humans remains to be established. The present project serves to determine whether effects of lixisenatide on gastric emptying, appetite, food intake and resting energy expenditure are dependent on the endocrine pancreas. The study is a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blinded, cross-over study. 12 healthy persons and 12 pancreatectomized patients (i.e. patients who have had their pancreata removed due to pancreatic cancer or severe chronic pancreatitis) will be subjected to two experimental days on which they will undergo a liquid meal test followed by a fasting period and finished off with an ad libitum meal with lixisenatide and placebo, respectively.