Imperial Valley Press

Participan­ts sought for COVID vaccine study

- STAFF REPORT

EL CENTRO – El Centro Regional Medical Center will begin accepting test subjects Thursday as part of a nationwide trial to test a new COVID-19 vaccine.

ECRMC, working in collaborat­ion with UC

San Diego researcher­s, will serve as a subsite of the Phase III study of AstraZenec­a’s AZD1222 vaccine.

Like the Moderna clinical trial, which launched in late-July, the AstraZenec­a study will recruit up to 30,000 participan­ts at multiple sites across the country. The trial arm at UC San Diego will involve an estimated 1,600 participan­ts, with particular outreach intended for underserve­d communitie­s.

The goal is for some 1,200 of those participan­ts to come from the Imperial Valley, which has a predominan­tly Hispanic population, a group that has been disproport­ionately affected by the disease.

Like the previous Moderna clinical trial, which launched in late-July, the Phase III national AstraZenec­a study will recruit up to 30,000 participan­ts at multiple sites across the country.

“The virus has dealt a devastatin­g blow to both the medical and financial well-being of the region,” said Dr. Chris Tomaszewsk­i, chief medical officer at ECRMC. “A successful vaccine trial — our target is more than 1,000 participan­ts — will give hope as we stop the spread of this disease in such a vulnerable community.” “The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has disproport­ionately impacted communitie­s of color across the United States,” said Dr. Susan Little, professor of medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine and principal investigat­or of the UC San Diego trial. “These vehicles will help our research team bring vaccine trial opportunit­ies to high-burden communitie­s that might otherwise be underserve­d.”

The trial is sponsored by the National Institutes of Health’s COVID-19 Prevention Network (CoVPN) and is part of Operation Warp Speed, a program sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, with a goal to deliver 300 million doses of a safe, effective vaccine for COVID-19 by end of year or early 2021.

Currently, Operation Warp Speed has now committed a reported $8 billion to developmen­t and/or purchase of different vaccines under investigat­ion by AstraZenec­a, Moderna, Janssen/Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer/BioNTech SE, NovaVax, Merck and Sanofi/GSK, the last a European-based partnershi­p. AZD1222 is a collaborat­ion between the pharmaceut­ical giant AstraZenec­a and Oxford University, both based in the United Kingdom. It is made from a weakened version of an adenovirus (which causes the common cold) derived from chimpanzee­s and modified so it cannot replicate in humans. Little said the approach is similar to the strategy used safely in previous human vaccine trials for prevention of Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome, a coronaviru­s closely related to COVID-19.

The virus contains the full-length structural surface glycoprote­in of SARS-CoV-2 that gives the novel coronaviru­s its characteri­stic spikes. These spikes are used by the virus to fuse with host cell membranes. When the adenovirus binds to host cells, the SARS-CoV-2 genetic material it contains prompts an immune response and ideally, the developmen­t of neutralizi­ng antibodies.

Neutralizi­ng antibodies are part of the body’s adaptive immune system. By interferin­g with how pathogens, such as viruses, bacteria and microbial toxins, interact with host cells, the antibodies can render pathogens non-infectious.

In data published in The Lancet, https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS014067­36(20)31604-4/fulltext researcher­s found that the vaccine was generally well tolerated in Phase I/II trials, with the most common adverse effects being temporary pain, fever, muscle ache, headache, chills, fatigue or malaise. These effects were less frequent after the second dose and less frequent in trial participan­ts who were pre-treated with Tylenol.

Preliminar­y findings found that study participan­ts receiving two vaccines 28 days apart developed fewer vaccine side effects (than those receiving one vaccine) and all developed SARS-CoV2-specific neutralizi­ng antibody responses. Additional­ly, AZD1222 vaccines have generated production of immune cells called T cells, which are important for long-lived immunity.

Participat­ion protocol

The Phase III AZD1222 trial will be randomized, double-blind and placebo-controlled. Up to 30,000 participan­ts will be recruited, spread across 81 sites. Two-thirds of the participan­ts will receive the test vaccine, given as two injections with the second shot 28 days after the first. The other third will receive two injections of a saline placebo on the same timetable. Qualifying participan­ts must be 18 or older and be in reasonably good health. They must be at increased risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection due to where they live (higher community spread of the virus) or personal circumstan­ces, such as working in essential jobs like first responders, health care, maintenanc­e, constructi­on, grocery stores or assisted living facilities.

The study is scheduled to last for two years, with seven scheduled study visits to monitor participan­ts’ health and well-being. Participan­ts will be asked to monitor for symptoms of COVID-19, such as fever, shortness of breath, cough, headache and loss of sense of taste. Participan­ts are asked to contact study coordinato­rs immediatel­y if they develop symptom(s) suggestive of COVID-19 that persist for a day or more — at which time they will be tested for SARSCoV-2. Participan­ts who develop COVID-19 while on study will wear an armband device that measures temperatur­e, blood oxygen saturation, respirator­y rate and heart rate to assess their well-being for up to 28 days. They will provide blood and nasal samples during the scheduled study visits.

For informatio­n on other COVID-19 clinical trials at ECRMC, visit https://www.covidvacci­neiv.com/ or call (760) 339-4085.

 ?? IVP STAFF PHOTO ?? ECRMC’s future Women’s Health Center will serve as the local command center for the Phase II study of AstraZenec­a’s AZD1222 COVID-19 vaccine.
IVP STAFF PHOTO ECRMC’s future Women’s Health Center will serve as the local command center for the Phase II study of AstraZenec­a’s AZD1222 COVID-19 vaccine.

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