Daily Observer (Jamaica)

CHILDREN & VACCINES

- BY JUDY MARTIN

University of Pittsburgh THE CONVERSATI­ON) — Now that twothirds of all adults in the United States have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine as of mid-july 2021, life seems to be returning to some semblance of pre-pandemic times. People are again travelling, eating in restaurant­s with friends, attending in-person gatherings, and flocking to movie theatres and Major League baseball games.

Yet, for parents of children under the age of 12, who are not yet eligible for COVID-19 vaccines, there is still no collective sigh of relief. Many parents have concerns about the upcoming school year and the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the delta variant.

Clinical research studies of the mrnabased vaccines for children under 12 are ongoing, and authorisat­ion of a vaccine for this younger age group is still at least several months away. These trials are necessary because children have important difference­s in physiology and responses to vaccines from those of adults. Conducting separate studies in children under age 12 is a vital step toward ending the pandemic.

As a specialist in paediatric infectious diseases, I have been conducting research on common infections in children and related vaccines for over 20 years. Here at the University of Pittsburgh, our Pittsburgh Vaccine Trials Unit has carried out both adult and paediatric clinical trials for vaccines to fight COVID-19.

Ours was one of two COVID-19 vaccine clinical research trial sites in the Pittsburgh area and one of more than 100 sites across the US that have participat­ed in this effort through the COVID-19 Prevention Network, which was formed by the National Institutes of Health to combat the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. Our team is about to begin the next phase of trials with the six to 11-yearold age group, which relies on volunteer participan­ts.

TESTING A VACCINE FOR SAFETY AND EFFICACY

Vaccines work by tricking the body’s immune system into making proteins called antibodies that fight disease — but without giving a person the disease.

Before a vaccine can be approved for use in the general public, it usually goes through clinical safety trials that can take anywhere from two to 15 years. The US Government’s Operation Warp Speed accelerate­d this process in an unpreceden­ted way, largely because it invested US$18 billion up front to help create lab spaces, build infrastruc­ture, make research investment­s, and pre-purchase vaccines. In December 2020, health-care workers in the US began receiving the first COVID-19 vaccines authorised for adults.

Vaccine studies begin with experiment­s in the laboratory, where candidate vaccines are developed and tested in animals. After pharmaceut­ical companies and government labs perform initial testing on vaccine candidates, they then turn to research groups throughout the country and world to run several phases of clinical trials in people.

In phase one trials, the primary goal is to establish the safety of the vaccine in humans. During phase two, researcher­s continue to evaluate the safety of the vaccine, but with an eye to determinin­g the exact dosage needed to achieve the necessary immune response to confer protection. Once a vaccine candidate enters phase three trials, the primary goal is to study how well people are protected from the infection or disease, while continuing to assess safety and monitor for potential side effects.

Once clinical trials are complete, vaccines must still undergo a rigorous evaluation process through the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, the regulatory body that oversees vaccine safety and effectiven­ess.

After tens of thousands of adults participat­ed in phase three clinical research studies of COVID-19 vaccines over several months in 2020 and early 2021, the US now has three vaccines authorised for emergency use by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) for people 18 years of age and older and one vaccine, Pfizer, authorised for use in children age 12 and older.

HOW CHILDREN’S BODIES DIFFER FROM GROWN-UPS’

Children are not just littler grown-ups; their bodies differ from that of adults in important ways.

Their brains are developing rapidly, and their immune systems have important difference­s, too, particular­ly in toddlers and babies. For the first few months of life, infants’ immune systems still possess the antibodies they received from their mothers across the placenta during late pregnancy. This changes how newborns respond to pathogens and makes them less able to mount an immune response to some vaccines. Young children’s bodies gradually ramp up their own immune systems as their protection from mum wears off.

So vaccines often need to be tailored specifical­ly for young children. For instance, the pneumococc­al vaccine that prevents infections like pneumonia in adults is made from sugar molecules called polysaccha­rides, which coat the outside of pneumococc­al bacteria. But infants can’t mount an effective immune response to these sugar molecules. So researcher­s had to develop a unique version of the vaccine for babies.

Even when a vaccine for adults is proven safe in children, there can be important difference­s in how their bodies respond to it. The vaccine dose that works best in adults might cause a high fever in children, for instance. So one key goal of the COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials in children will be to determine the optimal dosage for each age group.

Researcher­s need to be on alert for side effects that might only occur in youngsters and didn’t appear during vaccine tests on adults. Safety is critical and each study has many layers of safety mechanisms in place to ensure that researcher­s like us proceed cautiously and evaluate all of the data and informatio­n at every step along the way.

For example, trial participan­ts keep daily diaries and report any side effects or changes. Vaccine clinical trials include frequent safety checks with participan­ts, and unusual reactions are reported immediatel­y to the study sponsor so that any problems can be identified quickly. Researcher­s also adhere to strict “pause” rules if a serious safety concern arises.

CLINICAL TRIALS FOR CHILDREN

After setting up a new clinical trials space and gathering all the staff and necessary equipment, the Trials Unit here at the University of Pittsburgh was ready to host phase three clinical trials with volunteer participan­ts.

Beginning in August 2020 and into the fall, we ran phase three adult clinical trials for both the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines. We recently enrolled children ages six to 11, as well as six to 24 months of age, in phase two of the paediatric Moderna trials, focusing on whether the vaccine is safe to use in these children and at what dosages.

We are now set to move to phase three of the paediatric trials, currently slated to begin in mid-august for children age six to

11, throughout the US and Canada. This final stage of the clinical trials will determine how well the vaccine really works to keep children from getting COVID-19. We expect early results of these studies by this fall, after which they will be reviewed by the FDA.

The FDA said on July 15 that emergency authorisat­ion for vaccines for children under 12 is likely to come by early to mid-winter.

THE VITAL ROLE OF VOLUNTEERS IN ENDING THE PANDEMIC

Volunteeri­ng for a research study is not for everyone.

When a family volunteers to enrol in a vaccine study, our research team has an in-depth discussion with them about the requiremen­ts, as well as the potential risks and benefits. We try to answer all of their questions so that they can decide if a study is a good fit for them. Ultimately, parents are trying to make a decision that is in the best interest of their children.

Often we hear from our volunteers that they wanted to help bring the pandemic to an end or felt it was their personal responsibi­lity to help others. Their willingnes­s to participat­e is crucial to finding a safe and effective vaccine that will hopefully help end the pandemic and to help parents — and children — return to the freedoms of pre-pandemic life.

Taken from the Associated Press, this article was originally published on The Conversati­on , an independen­t and non-profit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

 ?? (Photo: Pixabay) ?? Vaccines often need to be tailored specifical­ly for young children.
(Photo: Pixabay) Vaccines often need to be tailored specifical­ly for young children.
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