The Bakersfield Californian

Should vaccine volunteers now get the real thing?

- BY MARION RENAULT

Tens of thousands of Americans have volunteere­d to test COVID-19 vaccines, but only about half of them got the real thing during trials.

Now, with the first vaccine rollouts and a surge in coronaviru­s infections, experts are debating what to do about the half that got a dummy shot.

Should everyone now be offered a vaccine? Or should the two groups in the Pfizer and Moderna studies remain intact in order to collect long-term data on how well the vaccines work?

“There’s a real tension here,” said Dr. Jesse Goodman, an infectious disease specialist and former chief scientist at the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. “There’s not an easy answer.”

HOW VACCINE STUDIES WORK

New drugs, vaccines or treatments usually go through rigorous tests and evaluation­s before reaching regulators for approval.

For vaccines, researcher­s compare what happens when a large group of volunteers gets the shots, versus what happens to another large group that doesn’t. They compare side effects in each group. And they measure the vaccine’s effectiven­ess by looking at how many in each group pick up infections.

To do this fairly, researcher­s randomly assign participan­ts to receive a vaccine or a dummy shot, usually a dose of salt water.

Volunteers know there’s a 50-50 chance they could be put in either group — and they are not told which group they landed in. Often, the researcher­s or others involved in the testing are also “blinded” and don’t know either.

SHOULD TEST VOLUNTEERS BE TOLD?

About 17,000 of Moderna’s study participan­ts received a placebo, as did about 22,000 people in Pfizer’s trial.

With the ongoing coronaviru­s crisis, health experts worry about leaving them in the dark and unprotecte­d. They argue they should be given a vaccine now in recognitio­n of their willingnes­s to be a part of the trials during the pandemic.

“Volunteers have been instrument­al,” said Moncef Slaoui, chief scientist of the government’s Operation Warp Speed program. “They should be rewarded for it.”

The companies would have to “unblind” or “unmask” the studies, revealing whether participan­ts got the vaccine or the dummy shot.

Unmasking is usually done at the end of testing. Moderna and Pfizer, though, designed their studies to last two years to do long-term follow-up.

“I don’t think there’s anybody who thinks it’s reasonable or feasible to keep the people blinded for two years,” said Susan Ellenberg, an expert in clinical trials at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“Given we have a pandemic, people are ready to settle for the short-term results.”

PROS AND CONS OF “UNMASKING”

With the rollout of vaccines and the uncertaint­y of their status, volunteers could decide to drop out once they are eligible to get one. They might stay in the study if they’re told what they got, said Dr. Ana Iltis, a bioethicis­t at Wake Forest University.

“Participan­ts could leave in droves. They could say, ‘If you don’t tell me what I got, I’m out of here,’” said Iltis. “You cannot force people to stay.”

In an ideal world, participan­ts could hold off to discover whether they received the dummy shot or the vaccine. But experts agree the current circumstan­ces are extraordin­ary.

Still, unmasking participan­ts would affect the trials’ scope and results.

If someone learns they’ve already been vaccinated, for example, they may stop social distancing or wearing masks — increasing their potential exposure to the virus and possibly spreading it. It’s not yet known if vaccinated people can still carry and transmit the virus.

On the flip side, if a person finds out they only received the dummy shot, they might take precaution­s they wouldn’t otherwise.

Either outcome, Goodman said, “means the trial has basically come to an end.”

Before granting its emergency use approval, the FDA required Pfizer and Moderna to provide two months of follow-up data. If studies are cut short, it becomes harder to get long-term effects, including how long immunity lasts.

WHAT THE COMPANIES SAY

Pfizer plans to eventually vaccinate all its study participan­ts. It’s opting for a more gradual, voluntary process. The company will offer that option to those who got dummy shots as soon as they would have access to the vaccine outside of the study.

Moderna is considerin­g immediatel­y offering the vaccine to all who got dummy shots. More than one-quarter of them are health care workers and first in line for the vaccine anyway, the company noted.

“Many have already left. Sadly, it’s not a small number,” said Dr. Lindsey Baden, who’s involved in testing Moderna’s vaccine at Brigham and Women’s hospital in Boston. “This is not theoretica­l. It’s happening.”

British pharmaceut­ical company AstraZenec­a, which has enrolled at least 23,000 so far in its ongoing U.S. study, recently decided to offer individual participan­ts the opportunit­y to be unmasked as they become eligible for the approved vaccines.

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