Call & Times

Moderna, NIH launch 30,000-person trial of coronaviru­s vaccine

- Carolyn Y. Johnson

At 6:45 a.m. Monday, a volunteer in Savannah, Ga., received a shot in the arm and became the first participan­t in a massive human experiment that will test the effectiven­ess of an experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccine candidate. The vaccine is being developed by the biotechnol­ogy company Moderna in collaborat­ion with the National Institutes of Health.

The vaccinatio­n marks a much-anticipate­d milestone: the official launch of the first in a series of large U.S. clinical trials that will each test experiment­al vaccines in 30,000 participan­ts, half receiving the medicine and half receiving a placebo. Pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer also announced that it was initiating a 30,000-person vaccine trial, at 120 sites globally.

“We are participat­ing today in the launching of a truly historic event in the history of vaccinolog­y,” Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said at a news conference. He noted that the United States has never moved faster to develop a vaccine, from basic science to a large Phase 3 trial designed to test safety and effectiven­ess.

Fauci predicted that researcher­s probably would be able to tell whether the Moderna vaccine was effective by November or December, though he explained that it was a “distinct possibilit­y” that an answer could come sooner. Pfizer officials have said the company expects to be able to seek regulatory authorizat­ion or approval by October.

Company and government officials repeatedly underscore­d that while the vaccine effort is moving at record-breaking speed, safety is not being sacrificed.

“There is no compromise at all, with regard to safety, nor of scientific integrity,” Fauci said.

Both vaccines require two doses, spaced several weeks apart. Then researcher­s will have to wait to see whether people get infected or sick from the novel coronaviru­s. What they hope to witness is a clear benefit: fewer infections in people who received the vaccine, or less severe episodes of covid-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s. There are many unknowns about how long it could take to see a clear signal of success or failure – including how fast the trials will recruit participan­ts and how long it takes for enough people to become infected to observe whether there is an effect.

Statistici­ans have been crunching the numbers to predict how many infections would need to occur in the study population to gauge the vaccine’s effectiven­ess. To show that the Moderna vaccine is 60% effective, Fauci said, there would need to be about 150 infections among the 30,000 participan­ts.

The trials are also the biggest test yet of a promising technology that has never been approved for use outside medical research. Either vaccine could become the first in a new class of medicines. The vaccines deliver a snip of genetic material that carries the blueprint for the spiky protein that dots the surface of the coronaviru­s. After a person is vaccinated, their cells will follow the genetic instructio­ns to build the proteins, and their immune systems, confronted with the spike protein, learn how to recognize and mount a defense to the virus without ever being infected.

“I believe it is a historic day: the first Phase 3 covid-19 vaccine being run in the U.S.,” Moderna chief executive Stephane Bancel said. “It’s a historic day for science, as well. This is the first Phase 3 of a messenger RNA medicine in the world.”

Matt Slovick, 61, volunteere­d to be part of that history and showed up to receive a shot Monday afternoon at Meridian Clinical Research in Rockville, Md. Before the pandemic, Slovick, who works for an insurance company, did much of his work face-to-face, with on-site visits to clients and presentati­ons to groups of people. Now, he works remotely and has seen small businesses shut down. His oldest daughter was furloughed from her hospitalit­y job because of the pandemic, and his younger daughter was on the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, the Navy aircraft carrier that was home to a major outbreak in March.

“Thank goodness, my daughter’s results came back negative,” Slovick said. “As an American, I was doing what I was supposed to do – staying at home, wearing a mask. I thought: Maybe I can help the whole populace of the country to get this thing going” when he heard about the vaccine trial.

Meridian Clinical Research is one of nearly 87 sites recruiting participan­ts across the country for the Moderna trial – and was scheduled to vaccinate the first dozen people on Monday. Shishir Khetan, a physician leading the effort to recruit 300 to 400 people there, said that the first day of any trial is typically slower, but that conducting a trial in a global pandemic is even more complicate­d. Researcher­s cannot conduct informatio­n sessions about the trial with groups, as they might under normal circumstan­ces, or let people stay in a communal waiting room after their vaccinatio­n.

Khetan said the biggest misconcept­ion he hears about the vaccine trial is the worry that the vaccine could infect people. But the vaccine does not pose an infection risk; it’s just a fragment of genetic material that codes for a piece of the virus.

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