Toronto Star

More sickness for a quicker vaccine?

Would you volunteer to be exposed to COVID-19 to help test treatments? Should you even have the option? Researcher­s are debating the issue

- DENISE GRADY

One way to quickly see if a coronaviru­s vaccine works would be to immunize healthy people and then deliberate­ly expose them to the virus, some researcher­s are suggesting.

Proponents say this strategy, called a human challenge trial, could save time because rather than conducting tests the usual way — by waiting for vaccinated people to encounter the virus naturally — researcher­s could just infect them.

Challenge trials have been used to test vaccines for typhoid, cholera, malaria and other diseases. For malaria, volunteers have stuck their arms into chambers full of mosquitoes to be bitten and infected. But there were so-called rescue medicines to cure those who got sick. There is no cure for COVID-19.

For both ethical and practical reasons, the idea of challenge trials for a coronaviru­s vaccine has provoked fierce debate.

In a draft report published last month, the World Health Organizati­on said that challenge trials could yield important informatio­n, but that they would be daunting to run because of the potential of the coronaviru­s “to cause severe and fatal illness and its high transmissi­bility.”

The report, by a 19-member advisory panel, provided detailed guidelines about the safest way to conduct challenge trials, recommendi­ng that they be limited to healthy people ages 18-25 because they have the least risk of severe illness or death from the virus. The virus would be dripped into their noses.

But the panel also said its members split nearly in half over several major issues. They were divided over whether trials should be carried out if no highly effective therapy had been identified to treat participan­ts who got sick; over whether studies in healthy young adults could predict the efficacy of a vaccine in older people or other high-risk adults; and over whether challenge trials could really speed vaccine developmen­t.

In the United States, government researcher­s say that although their primary focus is on traditiona­l clinical trials, they have already begun preparing for human challenge trials, in case they are needed to test either vaccines or treatments. The National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases “has begun investigat­ions of the technical and ethical considerat­ions of conducting human challenge studies,” a spokespers­on, Jennifer Routh, said by email. The institute is also developing strains of the virus that could be used to infect participan­ts.

Routh said that toward the end of 2020 the institute would use data from standard clinical trials to assess future human challenge studies, “should they be needed and should they be deemed safe and ethical to employ.”

Citing concerns about putting healthy people at risk, Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the institute, said in an interview, “If something like that takes place, it has to be done with absolute intense examinatio­n by a group of independen­t ethicists and independen­t people who have nothing to do with the trial.”

But the National Institutes of Health, the umbrella organizati­on for the institute, offered a more cautious assessment, saying the government “is not planning to support human challenge studies for COVID-19,” in an email from spokespers­on Renate Myles. “There is an expectatio­n of sufficient natural transmissi­on for efficacy studies that will be launched as early as summer 2020. The developmen­t of a human challenge model would take longer than this timeline and human challenge studies have a number of serious ethical considerat­ions.”

Among the staunchest advocates of challenge trials is Dr. Arthur L. Caplan, a bioethicis­t at NYU Langone Medical Center.

“I haven’t really heard convincing ethical counter objections,” he said in an interview.

A challenge trial could take advantage of the lower death rate in people ages 18-29, Caplan and Dr. Stanley Plotkin, a vaccine expert and professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, suggested in an article published in April in the journal Vaccine.

“Despite the danger, we believe it is ethical to ask now for volunteers who would be informed about the known and unknown risks,” they wrote.

Other researcher­s have made similar arguments.

“Such an approach is not without risks, but every week that vaccine rollout is delayed will be accompanie­d by many thousands of deaths globally,” a team led by Dr. Nir Eyal, a bioethicis­t at Rutgers, wrote in March, in an article in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Eyal’s group suggested choosing an age range of 20-45, and even proposed using a control group that would receive a placebo shot rather than the vaccine but would still be exposed to the virus, so at least some would almost certainly fall ill.

“I think that’s a little bit cuckoo,” Caplan said. “That’s too risky.”

There is no highly effective treatment for COVID, and no sure way to predict who will recover quickly and who will become severely ill.

“Multiple measures would be put in place to ensure that, prior to consenting, potential participan­ts fully comprehend the unusual risks involved in the study,” Eyal’s group wrote.

Dr. Jeffrey Kahn, director of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, sharply questioned any form of a challenge trial for COVID, saying that participan­ts cannot be fully informed about the risks, because too little is known about the virus.

“There are too many uncertaint­ies,” he said.

Although it is not common, healthy young people have inexplicab­ly become critically ill from the virus, and some have died.

“All we need is one of those cases in the course of a vaccine trial where we intentiona­lly infected somebody with this coronaviru­s,” Kahn said. “What would we say then? Was it worth it?”

Several vaccine makers had lukewarm reactions to the idea. Dr. Paul Stoffels, chief scientific officer at Johnson & Johnson, said the company would consider challenge trials only if a treatment became available. He also said larger, traditiona­l Phase 3 trials would provide

“All we need is one of those (fatal) cases in the course of a vaccine trial where we intentiona­lly infected somebody with this coronaviru­s. What would we say then? Was it worth it?”

DR. JEFFREY KAHN JOHNS HOPKINS BERMAN INSTITUTE FOR BIOETHICS

more safety informatio­n.

Dr. Tal Zaks, chief medical officer of Moderna, which expects to begin Phase 3 vaccine trials this month, said in an interview that the question of a challenge trial “will likely be moot as it relates to our developmen­t.”

“If such a model were available we would look at it, but I’d hate to put people in harm’s way,” Zaks said. “We are right now leading this race and it might be relevant for other vaccines behind us.”

Other vaccine makers are considerin­g the idea. Dr. Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford, which developed a coronaviru­s vaccine that is already in Phase 3 testing, said there was “potential utility” in challenge trials for vaccines and treatments. He said his institute, which has conducted such studies in the past for malaria, typhoid and other diseases, might perform one for COVID before the end of the year, to test vaccine efficacy. He said the studies were also a good way to compare vaccines.

The trials would be acceptable even without a treatment, he said, because the participan­ts would be young and fit, and exposed to only a low dose of the virus, so any illness that occurred would most likely be “self-limiting.”

But Hill added: “Having a treatment would be helpful. By the time we get to doing this, there may be one.”

Caplan argues that the first few vaccine candidates are likely to fail, and that it will be increasing­ly difficult to recruit the 20,000 or 30,000 people needed for each subsequent trial. Challenge trials in small numbers of participan­ts could more quickly identify products that do not work, letting researcher­s scrap them and reserve larger studies for more promising candidates.

Another cause for concern is that challenge trials would enroll far fewer patients than traditiona­l studies of vaccine efficacy, which generally include tens of thousands of people. Smaller studies may miss rare side effects that could become a serious problem once a vaccine is given to millions of people.

“The number of people who will have received the vaccine at the time of licensure will be very small in comparison to the usual Phase 3 efficacy trials,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University and a member of a group that will review vaccine data as advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Because many vaccine candidates involve new technologi­es, “that’s all the more reason you need a large safety base,” Schaffner said.

Challenge trials might also be seen by the public as a means of cutting corners, and undermine confidence in coronaviru­s vaccines, he said, adding, “I think it’s not a great idea.”

Advocates say volunteers for a coronaviru­s challenge trial would be young and healthy, without chronic health problems that would put them at high risk of complicati­ons or death from the virus. They would also be people who have a “substantia­l” risk of catching the disease anyway — even without being deliberate­ly exposed — because they live in hot spots with high transmissi­on rates, or because of their jobs or living conditions, proponents say. Eyal’s group suggested an age range of 20-45.

During a trial, they would be quarantine­d and monitored closely, and if they became ill would receive the best known treatment — possibly the antiviral drug remdesivir, or convalesce­nt plasma from people who had recovered from the illness. But so far, remdesivir’s benefits have been described as “modest,” and studies of convalesce­nt plasma are still underway. The steroid dexamethas­one lowered the death rate in one study, but is recommende­d only for those who become severely ill.

The article by Eyal’s group struck a chord with Josh Morrison, 34. Eight years ago, he donated a kidney to a stranger, and now runs an advocacy group for kidney donors. The opportunit­y to save someone else’s life meant a great deal to him and he sees challenge trials as a chance to do it again.

“If it could lead to a speedier creation of a vaccine for the disease COVID-19, we are willing — without reservatio­n — to have doctors infect us with the novel coronaviru­s,” he and Sophie Rose, 22, a graduate student in epidemiolo­gy, wrote in the Washington Post.

Morrison, who had a brief career as a corporate lawyer, has begun organizing others who are interested in volunteeri­ng into a group called 1DaySooner. So far, about 30,000 people from 140 countries have signed up online saying they might participat­e in a challenge trial. Donations of $700,000 have enabled him to hire three full-time staff members.

“There are significan­t risks in childbirth and kidney donation,” Morrison said in an interview. “No one should take them lightly, but they are things we allow people to consent to. I hope for an effective treatment by the time a trial would be conducted, but if not, I do think it would be reasonable to go forward with challenge trials.”

His hope is that an establishe­d research centre will conduct the trials. Much of his efforts have gone toward finding a company to produce batches of the virus for use in the studies.

“Our goal is not to manage the manufactur­ing process or trial process ourselves,” he said. “Our goal is to make the preconditi­ons, so that if challenge trials would be useful, they’re available. ”

So far, donors have offered a total of $1 million for virus production, if Morrison can find a vendor. He said he had a promising candidate, but declined to name the company.

Several vaccine makers have expressed interest in challenge trials, but the discussion­s have been confidenti­al, so he could not reveal which companies, he said. But he believes the trials will happen.

“I don’t think of this as a pie-in-the-sky idea.”

 ?? ANDREW TESTA THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A volunteer receives thumbs up before drinking a solution containing typhoid for a challenge trial, where someone is deliberate­ly infected to test a vaccine, at Churchill Hospital in Oxford, England, in August 2017. The idea of human challenge trials for a coronaviru­s vaccine has provoked fierce debate.
ANDREW TESTA THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A volunteer receives thumbs up before drinking a solution containing typhoid for a challenge trial, where someone is deliberate­ly infected to test a vaccine, at Churchill Hospital in Oxford, England, in August 2017. The idea of human challenge trials for a coronaviru­s vaccine has provoked fierce debate.
 ?? JACKIE MOLLOY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Josh Morrison, who runs an advocacy group for kidney donors, supports the idea of a coronaviru­s challenge trial and has begun organizing volunteers.
JACKIE MOLLOY THE NEW YORK TIMES Josh Morrison, who runs an advocacy group for kidney donors, supports the idea of a coronaviru­s challenge trial and has begun organizing volunteers.
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