Germanier R, Fürer E, Varallyay S, Inderbitzin T M
J Infect Dis. 1977 Apr;135(4):512-6. doi: 10.1093/infdis/135.4.512.
A cholera toxoid was produced by heating of a purified cholera toxin and treatment of the resulting toxoid procholeragenoid with a formaldehyde solution. When given subcutaneously and intramuscularly to volunteers in doses of 3-100 microng, the toxoid produced no noteworthy side effects, but the injections produced a dose-dependent rise in level of toxin-neutralizing antibodies in serum. Administration of toxoid in combination with whole-cell vaccine induced antitoxin levels that seemed to be higher than those induced by toxoid alone, but statistical analysis revealed a significant difference only between titers after administration of 10 microng of toxoid alone and those after administration of 10 microng of toxoid in combination with whole-cell vaccine.