Randomised, double-blind, parallel group, placebo-controlled, trial of Bactek for the prevention of lower respiratory tract infections in preterm infants in the UK: BALLOON study – study protocol
Sarah Joanne Kotecha, John Lowe, David Gillespie, Mahuampi Perez-Alijas, Ali F Aboklaish, Tarirai Lincoln Mahachi, Oliver Sebastian Cumming, Debbie Harris, Marie Hubbard, Emma Thomas-Jones, Tim Jones, Kirstin Ladell, Catherine Moore, Ian Humpreys, Jonathan Grigg

TL;DR
This study tests if a trained immunity-based vaccine called Bactek can reduce lower respiratory tract infections in preterm infants after hospital discharge.
Contribution
The study introduces Bactek as a potential preventive treatment for post-discharge respiratory infections in preterm infants.
Findings
Bactek is being tested for its ability to reduce unscheduled healthcare visits for lower respiratory tract infections in preterm infants.
The study tracks multiple secondary outcomes, including wheeze episodes, medication use, and adverse reactions.
Ethical and regulatory approvals are in place, and the trial is registered on ISRCTN.
Abstract
A significant proportion of infants born at ≤29+6 weeks’ gestation develop lung disease during the neonatal period, thus putting them at risk of developing prematurity-associated lung disease in childhood and adulthood. After discharge from the neonatal unit, pre-existing lung disease in preterm-born infants is exacerbated by (often frequent) respiratory viral infections requiring greater health utilisation, including hospital admissions, than their term-born equivalents. Opportunities to prevent viral infections in infancy are largely limited to anti-respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) antibody prophylaxis and recently maternal RSV immunisation, but in term-born infants, trained immunity-based vaccines such as Bactek (MV130, Inmunotek, Spain) are increasingly used. Bactek provides a promising therapeutic avenue for preterm-born infants to target postdischarge respiratory viral infection…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal and Maternal Infections · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research · Infant Development and Preterm Care
