Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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COVID-19 Vaccine will be Provided at No Cost – WspyNews

October 23, 2020

Governor J.B. Pritzker and Department of Public Health Director Ngozi Ezike say the first people to receive COVID-19 vaccines when available will be healthcare workers and first responders. Pritzker says the plan is subject to change at this point as there are still questions about when the vaccine will be available and how man doses it will require.

It will be free, although healthcare providers might charge a fee to administer the vaccine. The fee will be billed to insurance companies. No one will be denied the vaccine if they don't have insurance.

Ezike says a certain number of people will need to be vaccinated for it to be effective.

It will be up to individuals to decide if they want the vaccine.

Ezike says people still need to continue wearing a mask, washing hands, and keeping six feet of distance.

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COVID-19 Vaccine will be Provided at No Cost - WspyNews

Symvivo Corporation Receives Funding for COVID-19 Vaccine Program – BioSpace

October 20, 2020

Oct. 20, 2020 12:30 UTC

- Contribution of up to $2.8 million will support clinical advancement of bacTRL-Spike oral vaccine candidate - Proprietary bacTRL platform can be used to produce vaccines that can be stored at room temperature and administered orally rather than injected

BURNABY, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Symvivo Corporation today announced that it is receiving advisory services and funding of up to $2.8 million from the National Research Council Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC IRAP) to support the clinical advancement of bacTRL-Spike, the companys oral, room temperature-stable DNA vaccine candidate for the prevention of COVID-19.

The funding follows a notification Symvivo received from the Government of Canada indicating it had reviewed Symvivos proposal and its bacTRL-Spike vaccine candidate had met the required scientific and technical thresholds for funding.

We are excited to receive this important funding from NRC IRAP for the development of our COVID-19 vaccine candidate, said Alexander Graves, president and CEO of Symvivo Corporation. It is our hope that the promise shown with bacTRL-Spike in preclinical models, particularly its ability to generate a mucosal immune response, will continue in first-in-human trials. We are grateful to the NRC for supporting further investigation of bacTRL-Spike as we initiate our first Phase I trial of the vaccine candidate this quarter.

Unlike traditional vaccines, bacTRL-Spike is a capsule that can be taken orally, allowing individuals to self-administer the vaccine rather than requiring a trained medical professional to deliver it with an injection. In addition, the capsules can also be stored at room temperature.

About Symvivo

Symvivo is a clinical-stage biotechnology company advancing a proprietary platform for the site specific delivery of genes for the treatment and prevention of disease. Symvivos bacTRL platform technology delivers plasmid DNA, both orally and through IV application, that enables a patients own cells to produce therapeutic proteins. Symvivo is advancing therapeutics in the area of oral DNA vaccines, oncology, immunology and gene replacement. Symvivo is headquartered in Burnaby BC. For more information visit http://www.Symvivo.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20201020005222/en/

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Symvivo Corporation Receives Funding for COVID-19 Vaccine Program - BioSpace

Who will be first in Ohio to get COVID vaccine? State releases plan – The Cincinnati Enquirer

October 20, 2020

The first patient to receive a dose in the coronavirus vaccine study at UC Health was Jarelle Marshall, 37, an IT professional who lives in Cincinnati. The first dose on Aug. was administered via syringe by a licensed pharmacist, and study participants will receive a second dose in approximately one month.(Photo: UC Health)

COLUMBUS A COVID-19 vaccine is likely months away for most Ohioans, but Ohio officials have already submitted a plan for how to distribute it.

Ohio will prioritize high-risk healthcare workers, first responders and elderly and at-risk Ohioans in nursing homes and other congregate care settings in the first phase of distribution, according to a plan submitted to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Enquirer obtained the draft through a public records request.

The plan is marked "final draft" and is subject to change. Ohio Department of Health spokeswoman Melanie Amato said the draft plan provides a framework for decision-making when more details of a vaccineare known.

A handful of novel coronavirus vaccines are in phase III trials, including in Cincinnatiand Columbus. Vaccines are expected to be in short supply when first available.

The plan describes a system where state officials order the vaccine for the entire state and ship to counties and health care providers based on several factors, including population and the estimated immunity among residents.

[ The Enquirer is providing most of its coronavirus-related stories free to readers. We cant do this work without your support.Please consideradigital subscription to Cincinnati.com.]

As more vaccine becomes available, in phase two, distribution would broaden to essential workers at high risk of exposure, school teachers and staff, older Ohioans and people with underlying health conditions that put them at risk of complications from the virus. Minority populations, which have disproportionately been hospitalized or died after getting the novel coronavirus, could be prioritized.

The plan does not set a time line for when each group could get the vaccine, just when there are a large number of doses available, supply likely to meet demand for the second phase and then likely sufficient supply, slowing demand for the general public.

Texas plan similarly split everyone in three phases and estimated the third phase would begin in July 2021.

Ohio plans to partner with existing organizations, health care providers and employers to target each group.An estimated 2,000-5,000 providers are expected to enroll as pandemic vaccine providers.

The plan shows health officials are still working on many details, such as how to keep a vaccine cold throughout the supply chain. Ohio officialsare identifying sub-176 degree Fahrenheit freezers at hospitals, research facilities and other locations across the state; some may need extra security "because of the scarcity of the vaccine."

Officials want to display immunization progress by countyand immunization locations on the state's coronavirus website.

Read the 55-page plan below.

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Who will be first in Ohio to get COVID vaccine? State releases plan - The Cincinnati Enquirer

U.K. Preparing COVID-19 Vaccine Trials That Deliberately Expose Study Subjects – NPR

October 20, 2020

The study is still awaiting final regulatory approval. If given the green light, a study in which human volunteers will be infected with the coronavirus will begin in January at a biosecure unit at London's Royal Free Hospital. Kirsty O'Connor/PA Images via Getty Images hide caption

The study is still awaiting final regulatory approval. If given the green light, a study in which human volunteers will be infected with the coronavirus will begin in January at a biosecure unit at London's Royal Free Hospital.

Updated at 9:00 a.m. ET

Researchers in Britain are preparing to start a controversial COVID-19 "human challenge" study in which dozens of healthy volunteers will be exposed to live coronavirus in an effort to speed up vaccine development.

The Human Challenge Programme will be conducted by Imperial College London, which said Tuesday in a statement that it would be working in cooperation with the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, and hVIVO, a clinical company that has worked on viral human challenge models.

The U.K. government is preparing to invest $43.4 million (33.6 million pounds) in the study, which is the first of its kind involving the coronavirus.

The plan is to recruit healthy people between the ages of 18 and 30 with no prior history of COVID-19 symptoms and no known risk factors for the disease. Researchers would inoculate them with a candidate vaccine, then test its effectiveness by deliberately exposing them to live coronavirus.

The study is still awaiting final regulatory approval. If it is given the green light, it will begin in January at a biosecure unit at London's Royal Free Hospital. Volunteers will be quarantined in the facility and receive a laboratory-grown SARS-CoV-2 strain as part of the trial. They will be monitored around the clock for a few weeks.

Such studies are controversial because they raise ethical concerns. However, proponents say they can speed up vaccine development and, ultimately, save lives.

"No study is completely risk free, but the Human Challenge Program partners will be working hard to ensure we make the risks as low as we possibly can," lead researcher Dr. Chris Chiu from Imperial College London said in the statement.

"The UK's experience and expertise in human challenge trials as well as in wider COVID-19 science will help us tackle the pandemic, benefiting people in the UK and worldwide," he said.

"Participants in the initial study will be carefully selected to exclude anyone with a characteristic that has been shown to increase the severity of COVID-19 infection," hVIVO said in a statement.

Many vaccines have been tested in fast-tracked human challenge studies, ranging from seasonal flu to cholera and typhoid. The World Health Organization has issued guidelines for such research.

Belgium is looking into conducting similar trials involving coronavirus. The U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is funding the development of two SARS-CoV-2 challenge strains at a lab at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, according to Nature, and NIAID is reportedly awaiting data from Phase III vaccine studies before making decisions on COVID-19 challenge trials.

In the first part of the U.K. study, researchers will try to determine the smallest amount of virus required for a person to develop COVID-19 and elicit an immune response. That phase is scheduled to be wrap up sometime next year.

"The proportion of participants becoming infected and the amount of virus that they subsequently shed will be tracked to better understand the course of infection," Imperial College London said in the statement.

Vaccine task force chair Kate Bingham said the research will boost knowledge of the virus and aid further research.

"There is much we can learn in terms of immunity, the length of vaccine protection, and reinfection,'' she said in a statement, according to The Associated Press.

A nonprofit group called 1Day Sooner has already attracted more than 38,500 volunteers in more than 165 countries to take part in such studies.

"I would be lying if I said there's not like an underlying worry there or fear there because this virus is less than a year old," Chris Holdsworth, 25, who is seeking a doctorate at the University of Edinburgh and says he would be willing to participate, told The Guardian. "But at the same time I just try to contextualize the risk, without trivializing it."

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U.K. Preparing COVID-19 Vaccine Trials That Deliberately Expose Study Subjects - NPR

Effectiveness, politics impact public’s willingness to take COVID-19 vaccine – UPI News

October 20, 2020

Oct. 20 (UPI) -- Just over half of all people in the United States are "extremely, moderately or slightly likely" to take a COVID-19 vaccine that meets the Food and Drug Administration's minimum threshold for effectiveness, an analysis published Tuesday by JAMA Network Open found.

The public's willingness to receive an injection intended to prevent infection with the new coronavirus is influenced by the characteristics of the vaccine, as well as the politics surrounding its development, the data showed.

The nearly 1,000 adults surveyed in the analysis indicated that they would be 16% more likely to take a vaccine if it is found to be 90% effective at preventing infection, the researchers said.

The FDA has said that it will approve any vaccine against COVID-19 that is at least 50% effective at preventing infection or reducing disease severity, which is roughly the protection offered by the annual flu shot, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"Unsurprisingly, vaccine efficacy is an important driver of public willingness to vaccinate," study co-author Douglas L. Kriner told UPI.

"If the first [approved] vaccine or vaccines are at or near this minimum threshold, public health officials may have to do more to overcome public skepticism and convince Americans of the broad public health benefits," said Kriner, director of the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs at Cornell University.

For their study, Kriner and his colleagues surveyed 1,971 adults from across the United States in July, when COVID-19 numbers were rising in many parts of the country.

An increase in vaccine effectiveness from 50% to 70% raised the likelihood respondents would take the shot by about 7%, the data showed.

A vaccine that was 90% effective increased respondents' willingness to receive it by about 16%.

In addition to the shot's effectiveness, politics also played a role in the public's interest in any vaccine against COVID-19, Kriner and his colleagues found.

For example, respondents to the survey were 13% less likely to accept a vaccine made in China than one made in the United States.

Respondents were least likely to accept a vaccine endorsed by President Donald Trump, but only 3% more likely to take it if it was endorsed by former Vice President Joe Biden.

However, endorsements from the CDC and World Health Organization increased respondents' willingness to receive the vaccine by up to 10%, the researchers said.

"Our findings speak to the dangers of politicizing the vaccine -- endorsements form political leaders resulted in significantly lower levels of public willingness to vaccinate than endorsements from public health officials at the CDC or WHO," Kriner said.

"Politicization risks undermining all of the financial and intellectual capital invested thus far in this unprecedented effort," he said.

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Effectiveness, politics impact public's willingness to take COVID-19 vaccine - UPI News

New Haven health department planning on how to distribute COVID-19 vaccine when it’s available – WFSB

October 20, 2020

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New Haven health department planning on how to distribute COVID-19 vaccine when it's available - WFSB

New COVID-19 Vaccine Targeting Both B and T Cells – Contagionlive.com

October 18, 2020

Covaxx has developed its investigational vaccine and is currently in a phase 1/2 trial.

While it typically takes several years for a vaccine to be developed and approved, Covaxx Co-CEO Mei Mei Hu says with the rise of COVID-19, the pace of development has sped up tremendously.

Hu has worked in the past on animal vaccines and oversaw the launch of one of the first endobody vaccines in the world.

Her current company, Covaxx, is a Hauppauge, NY-based spinout of the UBI group of companies founded in 1985. UBI and its healthcare subsidiaries have been involved in antibody diagnostics and vaccine development and manufacturing for chronic and infectious diseases for more than 30 years.

They have developed a unique platform using a multi-antigen peptide approach to create their investigational COVID-19 vaccine, UB-612. With it, this becomes the first multitope peptide-based vaccine activating both B and T cells.

UB-612 has shown immunogenicity and a robust antibody response. During in vitro testing, antibodies have bound the target COVID-19 spike protein antigen, blocked binding to the hACE2 receptor, and neutralized the virus from replication.

Previously, the platform has been used to develop a vaccine for hand, foot and mouth disease, and was shown to be safe and well tolerated in 4 human clinical trials.

For UB-612, Covaxx began a phase 1 study in Taiwan back in August, and is planning a phase 1/2 study in the US this fall.

Hu spoke to Contagion about vaccine safety, provided some insider insights about vaccine development and manufacturing, and discussed their COVID-19 investigational vaccine.

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New COVID-19 Vaccine Targeting Both B and T Cells - Contagionlive.com

Bioethics in Practice: The Bioethics of Developing a COVID-19 Vaccine From Vaccine Trials to Distribution – The Commentator

October 18, 2020

As the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, continues to rapidly spread around the globe, scientists and researchers have been rushing to develop a vaccine to halt this deadly pandemic. With over 38 million cases and one million deaths worldwide, the need to create a safe and effective coronavirus vaccine as quickly as possible is of utmost importance. While vaccines ordinarily take 10 to 15 years to develop and bring to market, researchers hope to have this vaccine ready for distribution in far less time than any vaccine previously made. However, under the pressure to create this extremely complex vaccine in such a short time span, it is important not to lose sight of the numerous bioethical challenges researchers must overcome in creating this vaccine.

Developing a vaccine is a complex process which is made up of a series of carefully planned stages. Of these stages, perhaps the most significant is the clinical development stage, where three recurring phases of vaccine trials on human subjects of increasing sample size are conducted. Due to the large number and diversity of individuals affected by COVID-19, one of the greatest bioethical challenges to be overcome in vaccine trials is making sure that individuals of all ages, genders and ethnicities are properly represented among vaccine trial participants. This strong need for diversity in the vaccine trial samples is vital in ultimately ensuring that the vaccine will be effective in vaccinating the maximum number of individuals across all demographics. Yet, despite the numerous federal guidelines in place to establish diversity in vaccine trials, recent studies suggest that many of the coronavirus vaccine candidates currently in development lack this necessary diversity.

The population most at risk for complications and death by COVID-19 are elderly individuals, with those above the age of 65 comprising over 80% of COVID-19 deaths. And yet, numerous studies suggest that COVID-19 vaccine trials lack an adequate representation of elderly participants. One such study published in JAMA Internal Medicine on Sept. 28, 2020, found that elderly people were excluded from more than 50% of COVID-19 clinical trials and 100% of vaccine trials. One possible explanation for the exclusion of elderly study participants could be that their inclusion in coronavirus vaccine trials is itself a controversial bioethical issue, with many arguing that elderly individuals should not be included due to the increased health risks they may face from participating in these trials. However, others contend that the inclusion of healthy elderly individuals in these trials is necessary to ensure that the vaccine will be effective in this more vulnerable population.

In addition to a lack of elderly participants in COVID-19 vaccine trials, studies also suggest that there is insufficient representation of ethnic minorities in many vaccine trials in the United States. According to the CDC, Hispanic and Black Americans comprise a disproportionately large number of COVID-19 cases and are nearly twice as likely to die from COVID-19 complications than their white, non-Hispanic American counterparts. Despite this, many vaccine trials failed to obtain a representative sample of these minorities, particularly in the earlier vaccine trial phases of many of the vaccine candidates currently under development.

Ensuring that the sample of participants tested in COVID-19 vaccine trials accurately represents the population of individuals affected by COVID-19 is a highly significant bioethical issue, as having this diversity in vaccine trials ensures that all individuals affected by this virus, regardless of demographics, can look forward to equal benefits from this vaccine. Fortunately, measures are being taken to improve the diversity of COVID-19 vaccine trials going forward.

Equity in the development of a vaccine for COVID-19 is one bioethical concern; equity in the distribution of that vaccine is of equal importance. Once a COVID-19 vaccine is deemed safe and effective, the vaccine will need to be distributed on both a national and international level. On a national level, due to the limited number of vaccines that can be produced at a time, some groups of people will be prioritized in receiving the vaccine over others. The CDC recently released its plan for COVID-19 vaccine distribution, stating that first responders, health care workers, those with underlying health conditions, elderly individuals and essential workers will be prioritized in vaccine distribution. This decision on which populations to prioritize is a delicate bioethical issue, with the ultimate goal being to maximize the number of lives saved.

On an international level of vaccine distribution, perhaps the most significant bioethical challenge to be dealt with will be ensuring equal access to COVID-19 vaccines by all individuals, regardless of demographics, such as socioeconomic status or geographic location. There are currently several existing proposals on how to ethically distribute COVID-19 vaccines globally, all of which seek to establish a system through which individuals in poorer, less developed countries will have equal access to vaccines, though the majority of these proposals tend to inadvertently prioritize wealthier, more developed countries.

Developing and distributing a COVID-19 vaccine will involve overcoming a multitude of unique and complex bioethical challenges, from making sure that COVID-19 vaccine trials contain samples representative of the large, diverse populations of individuals affected by COVID-19, to ensuring that COVID-19 vaccines are allocated fairly and equitably to individuals of all demographics. COVID-19 has united individuals of all ages, ethnicities, and socioeconomic statuses across the globe through mutual feelings of fear, grief, and uncertainty; we can only hope that all of these individuals around the world will have an equal opportunity to once again be united, but this time, finding solidarity in the mutual feelings of hope and relief that an ethically designed and fairly distributed COVID-19 vaccine will bring.

Photo Caption: Scientists and researchers have been rushing to develop a vaccine to halt this deadly pandemic.Photo Credit: Pixabay

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Bioethics in Practice: The Bioethics of Developing a COVID-19 Vaccine From Vaccine Trials to Distribution - The Commentator

COVID-19 vaccine will take a year or more to distribute to all Kentuckians, official says – Courier Journal

October 18, 2020

Kentucky is expecting to receive its first federal shipment ofthe COVID-19 vaccine in in late 2020 or early 2021 but it will likely take a year or more to get that vaccine to the Bluegrass State's 4.4 million residents, the commissioner of the state's Department for Public Health said Friday.

Dr. Steven Stack announced that Kentucky submitted an initial comprehensive draft to theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention Friday on how the state plans todistribute the COVID-19 vaccine to local health departments and health care organizations.

The first phase of the plan will help ensure those most at risk certain health care workers and first responders have access to the vaccination, Stack said. The plan will accommodate vaccinating these essential workers in every county across the commonwealth.

Whenever the vaccine is approved, supplies will be "limited at first," which is why the commonwealth will have a phased approach to distributing the vaccine, Stack said.

The vaccine will be shipped to Kentucky from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Defense when it becomes available.

'An unbelievable chain of oppression': America's history of racism was a preexisting condition for COVID-19

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said the federal government provided a plan for how states should distribute the vaccine once it becomes available, and that Kentucky's plan "closely mimics their recommendation."

Protecting the health and lives of our Kentucky families remains our top priority as we battle COVID-19 and as vaccines arrive," Beshear said.

As of Saturday afternoon, close to 87,000 Kentuckians have been diagnosed with COVID-19 since the onset of the pandemic in March. The deadly virus has claimed the lives of 1,312people in the Bluegrass State.

Eric Friedlander,secretary of the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services, said in a statement that it is imperative for Kentuckians to get the COVID-19 vaccine as well as all other recommended vaccines.

"Vaccines are the best way we have to prevent infectious disease," Friedlander said. "A successful immunization program depends on the cooperation of every person.

State officials are continuing to encourage everyone toobserve social distancing, weara mask and practicehand hygiene.

A full copy of Kentucky's COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan is posted toto kycovid19.ky.gov. You can read it here.

Contact Ben Tobin at bjtobin@gannett.comand502-377-5675 or follow on Twitter @Ben__Tobin.

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COVID-19 vaccine will take a year or more to distribute to all Kentuckians, official says - Courier Journal

Early approval of a COVID-19 vaccine could stymie the hunt for better ones – Science Magazine

October 16, 2020

The United States, China, and other countries are ramping up production of experimental COVID-19 vaccinesa Beijing production line for one is shown herebut a limited supply of the first one with proven efficacy will likely still complicate the ethics of testing the other candidates.

By Jon CohenOct. 14, 2020 , 7:30 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

Success in the push to find a COVID-19 vaccine at record-breaking speed could hand the world a new problem. The first vaccine to cross the finish line might be only marginally effective, yet it could become the enemy of the goodor even the greatcandidates in the wings by disrupting ongoing studies.

In all likelihood, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or other regulators will issue the first COVID-19 vaccine approval or emergency use authorization (EUA) for one vaccine while many other candidates have clinical trials still underway or in the planning. At that point, ongoing studies of any vaccineincluding that first onecould become unethical because half the participants would get a placebo, at a time a vaccine with established efficacy will be available. Its a very vexing issue, says Christine Grady, who heads the bioethics department at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center, which organized a grand roundswebinaron the challenges last week.

Whats really important is that the science does continue, says Seth Berkley, who helps run the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access Facility, an international effort to develop and manufacture a portfolio of COVID-19 vaccines. He explains that the world needs multiple vaccines against the pandemic coronavirus. Not only might some work better than others, but factors such as cost or side effects mean some might offer benefits to specific groups, such as the elderly, pregnant women, or those in low-income countries.Even if multiple ones work, they may have characteristics that are particularly important for one population versus the other, says Berkley, who also heads the advocacy group Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

According to the World Health Organizations 2 October update of the COVID-19 vaccine landscape, 42 candidates are in clinical trials. Ten are in phase III trials, in which tens of thousands of participants randomly and blindly receive either the candidate or a placebo while their health is closely monitored. If efficacy signals surface during scheduled, interim analyses of the studies, vaccinemakers could seek EUAs before a trial reaches its planned end date (see graphic, below). The EUA guidance issued by FDA stipulates that a candidate only needs to achieve 50% efficacy at preventing symptomatic COVID-19 and, as an added measure of safety, have had 2 months pass after roughly half the participants have received their final dose. (Russia and China have already granted their versions of EUAs for various vaccines but without any evidence of efficacy.)

Participants in the NIH webinar agreed that the first EUA for a COVID-19 vaccine will change the landscape for that vaccines phase III trial and others. Should the blinded trial continue, to make sure that the early benefits pan out over a longer period of time, or should people in the placebo group immediately receive the vaccine? What if stopping the initial trial early reduces its ability to detect rare side effects, assess how long protection lasts, or compare the vaccines efficacy in the elderly versus young adults?

The efficacy trials planned by Operation Warp Speed, the U.S. COVID-19 vaccine effort, plan to take interim looks at data based on differentnumbers (roughly 50, 100, 150)of participants developing disease symptoms or other eventsthat allow researchers to gauge the impact of the candidate in people who receive the vaccine versus a placebo.

(GRAPHIC) C. BICKEL/SCIENCE; (Data) COVID-19 Prevention Network

And should ongoing phase III trials of other vaccines replace their placebo with the one that just showed efficacy? Will participants of those other trials drop outen masse? Will people refuse to even join new trials of yet other candidate vaccines, reasoning that they can get one that already works to some extent?

For all these questions, Grady tellsScienceInsider, the ethical equation boils down to a fairly simple calculus: the individual versus the societal value. During the webinar, philosopher Joseph Millum framed the issue as fundamental to all clinical research. Clinical research is ethically challenging because it exposes participants to risks for the benefit of others, not for the benefit of participants themselves, said Millum, who works with Grady at the NIH Clinical Center.

Yet scientists and ethicists dont always solve the simple calculus the same way. Grady say if early results for a COVID-19 vaccine candidate lead to an EUA, participants in that trial would have a right to know whether they had received a worthless placebo or a vaccine that potentially could help them. Its a benefit that people in the trial should have access to, she contends.

Millum counters theres a need to balance the risk to the individual in a blinded study versus the benefit to society of continuing the trial. Participants in the placebo arm are only being exposed to risk in the sense that the researchers are not providing something that could protect, he said at the webinar. If the chance that a person in the trial would be exposed to SARS-CoV-2 is relatively low, Millum said, then continuing the blinded study could then be justified in light of the need to gather socially valuable information. This is especially true, he added, given that the world will likely benefit from having more than one COVID-19 vaccine, both because of the needs of different populations and so that supply can meet demand.

Stanford University epidemiologist Steven Goodman agreed, stressing that vaccine studies differ dramatically from treatment trials, which aim to help people who have a disease. If someone asked me whether a therapy for a serious disease should first be given to people participating in the control arms of the clinical trial testing that therapy, Goodman reasoned, I would say, absolutely, yes.But people receiving a placebo in a vaccine trial dont need it the way sick people need a treatment, he argued. A widely used vaccine, he noted, can create herd immunity by reducing spread of a virus in a community. If everyone around you has gotten a highly effective vaccine, you dont need it, Goodman said. That shows that you dont have a problem that needs treating, but the population does. Whats more, people have many nonmedical ways to protect themselves from SARS-CoV-2, including masks and social distancing. In fact, if you can do those things, you might lower your individual risk more than what a partly effective vaccine could achieve, he said.

Grady said the questions become far more complicated when it comes to the impact of an EUA on other COVID-19 vaccine trials. If a trial of a different candidate has yet to start, ethical considerations may demand using the newly permitted product instead of a placebo.Such studies, known as a noninferiority or superiority trial, are slower and more costly more than trials comparing a vaccine with a placebo. If a trial is already underwayespecially if it is close to fully enrolledinvestigators could explain to participants the value to society of continuing the blinded study. They might choose to stick with the study, she says, especially if they were given this promise: Whenever this trial is finished, we will give you the vaccine thats the most effective.

If the approved vaccine only offers a modest benefit, Grady adds, participants may be more willing to continue in a blinded study. A 50% chance of receiving a potentially better vaccine by staying in the trial might, in the end, be a better gamble. Many people in vaccine trials also have strong altruistic motives for participating, she notes. And if the first COVID-19 vaccine given an EUA or approval is scarce, the incentive to leave the trial may be lower. If its not available, its not available, Grady says. Those who take part in a study of an unproven candidate at least have some chance of being protected.

If an EUA or a full approval does disrupt vaccine trials, Berkley says, bridging studies could fill the gap. If researchers can identify the immune factors that correlate with protection by the approved vaccine, then efficacy trials can pivot to quickly assessing whether other candidates trigger a similar response, avoidinga placebo comparison. (Researchers would have to inform potential participants that a proven vaccine existed, but they would not face the more serious ethical dilemma that a placebo presents.) Those correlates of protection could be enough proof of efficacy for an EUA or full approval of a COVID-19 vaccine. Its the same practice used to approve each years influenza vaccine. Bridging studies are also routinely used after a vaccine proves itself in an efficacy trial to show that it works in different populations. Thats whats so beautiful about having the correlate of immunity and an understanding of the vaccine, Berkley says.

The telltale sign of efficacy for a COVID-19 vaccine, researchers suspect, will be antibodies that neutralize the spike, the surface protein of SARS-CoV-2, preventing the virus from infecting cells. If trials find that a certain level of these neutralizing antibodies do correlate with protection against infection or severe disease, they can serve as a benchmark for comparing vaccines in development to proven ones. I think thats the way it will ultimately get done, Berkley says.

Then again, many vaccines on the market do not have a clear correlate of protection, and immune responses beyond antibodies to spike could play key roles in COVID-19 protection. If it turns out that the hypothesis of a spike protein turns out not to be correct, thats the whole front line set of vaccines, Berkley says. Bridging studies, he says, are going to be a challenge if you come up with a completely new approach.

Grady says shes glad to see that these complicated topics are moving beyond backroom discussions between public health officials, ethicists, and scientists. This is something that everybody needs to be talking about.

Read more here:

Early approval of a COVID-19 vaccine could stymie the hunt for better ones - Science Magazine

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