Global quest underway to speed COVID-19 vaccine trials
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[July 20, 2021]
By Julie Steenhuysen and Ludwig Burger
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Scientists are working
on a benchmark for COVID-19 vaccine efficacy that would allow drugmakers
to conduct smaller, speedier human trials to get them to market and
address a huge global vaccine shortage.
Researchers are trying to determine just what level of COVID-19
antibodies a vaccine must produce to provide protection against the
illness. Regulators already use such benchmarks - known as correlates of
protection - to evaluate flu vaccines without requiring large, lengthy
clinical trials.
"You could use it to predict efficacy from a vaccine, which will be more
important as we are less able to conduct placebo-controlled trials,"
said Stanley Plotkin, inventor of the Rubella vaccine and an expert on
correlates of protection.
"The information is flowing in," he said. "By the end of this year, I
think there will be enough data to convince everyone."An established
benchmark for COVID-19 would allow drugmakers to conduct vaccine trials
in just a few thousand people, about one-tenth the size of the studies
conducted to gain authorization for currently widely-used coronavirus
shots, researchers and drugmakers told Reuters. Those studies, involving
tens of thousands of volunteers, compared the rate of COVID-19
infections in people who received the shot with the rate in participants
who got a placebo. Such randomized, controlled trials may no longer be
considered ethical in some countries, as researchers cannot give a dummy
shot to people where an effective vaccine is widely available. In
addition, many of the new shots are being developed by small companies
that may not be able to conduct very large trials without government
funding or a partner with deep pockets. With an established correlate,
drugmakers could test blood samples from a smaller number of trial
participants who receive an experimental vaccine to see whether they
produced that benchmark level of protective antibodies.
Such a benchmark is “urgently needed” to help overcome challenges faced
by vaccine developers and boost availability of shots, Dr. Florian
Krammer, a virologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in
New York wrote this month in the journal Nature. Researchers at Oxford
University late last month proposed a potential correlate of protection
based on antibodies found in people who had received the AstraZeneca
vaccine. The work awaits peer reviewed by other scientists. Results from
a U.S.-backed study of Moderna’s vaccine are expected to be published in
a medical journal later this summer. "We're writing the paper right
now," said Dr. Peter Gilbert, a biostatistician from the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center. Some vaccine experts question whether antibody
levels will be a strong enough indicator of protection. Other components
of the immune system, such as T-cells and B-cells, are thought to
provide important defenses against COVID-19, but are more difficult to
measure.
That has been the contention of some top vaccine experts at Pfizer,
maker along with BioNTech of one of the most effective COVID-19
vaccines, produced in the largest quantities globally. It is also
possible that each different type of coronavirus vaccine will require
its own correlate, some experts said. Drugmakers working on a new type
of vaccine likely would not be able to rely on the correlates based on
Moderna’s messenger RNA shot, they say.
BRIDGING THE GAP Meanwhile, vaccine developers are trying to devise
acceptable substitutes to huge, placebo-controlled trials. Some aim to
show their shot provokes antibody responses at least as good as those
seen with currently authorized shots. European and UK health regulators
are working with companies to set standards for these so-called
“immunobridging” studies. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration declined
to say whether it would accept such trials for next-generation vaccines.
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Vials labelled "Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer-BioNTech
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine" are seen in this
illustration picture taken May 2, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
“It doesn't have to be an established correlate of
protection, but we have to ... arrive at the right pre-specified
criteria, because we cannot risk that a second-generation vaccine
... is of low or modest vaccine efficacy," FDA vaccine official Dr.
Marion Gruber told fellow regulators at a World Health Organization
Meeting in May. "That would undermine confidence in the vaccine
enterprise."
Italy's ReiThera Srl is developing a vaccine using
technology similar to AstraZeneca's and will try to demonstrate that
its shot is at least as effective.
The company has an agreement in principle on trial design with
European and British regulators, ReiThera's senior director Stefano
Colloca told Reuters. Massive clinical trials are "no longer ethical
and feasible in most countries worldwide," he said. French biotech
Valneva and Taiwan's Medigen Vaccine Biologics Corp plan to test
their vaccines against the AstraZeneca shot, even though both use a
different technology. Valneva's trial design was approved by UK
regulators. Medigen has a green light from Taiwan.
Sanofi, with partner GlaxoSmithKline, and Canada’s Medicago are
still opting for placebo-controlled trials involving thousands of
participants, including in countries with high infection rates and
fewer authorized vaccines available.
NEED FOR BOOSTERS? The hunt for a correlate is underway from the UK
to the United States and Australia. Scientists are comparing
antibody levels in vaccinated people who became infected with
COVID-19 to those who did not, to find a threshold of protection
that made the difference. Oxford University researchers said work is
needed to address correlates for emerging virus variants, such as
the highly transmissible Delta that has quickly become dominant
globally. Their proposed antibody model is based on trial volunteers
who had mainly contracted the earlier Alpha variant, first
identified in the UK.
U.S. government-backed scientists are studying infections in people
who received the Moderna vaccine. Moderna spokesman Ray Jordan said
the company is also working on the analysis and will publish updates
when available. The correlate benchmark might also indicate when and
whether people need vaccine boosters.
Pfizer has sought authorization for a third booster dose of its
vaccine, citing evidence of waning neutralizing antibody levels. But
the company has pushed back against the idea that those same
antibodies could be used to predict vaccine efficacy.
"No formal timeline is in place to have correlates of protection
established," a Pfizer spokesperson said. "We will continue to work
with the scientific community to better understand what immune
responses, whether neutralizing antibodies or otherwise, might
contribute to protection.”
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and Ludwig Burger in
Frankfurt; Additional reporting by Emilio Parodi in Milan, Matthias
Blamont in Paris, Michael Erman in Maplewood, New Jersey, Allison
Martell in Toronto and Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)
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