| Literature DB >> 33953551 |
Melissa K Andrew1,2, Kenneth E Schmader3, Kenneth Rockwood1, Barry Clarke4, Janet E McElhaney5.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted frail older adults, especially residents of long-term care (LTC) facilities. This has appropriately led to prioritization of frail older adults and LTC residents, and those who care for them, in the vaccination effort against COVID-19. Older adults have distinct immunological, clinical, and practical complexity, which can be understood through a lens of frailty. Even so, frailty has not been considered in studies of COVID-19 vaccines to date, leading to concerns that the vaccines have not been optimally tailored for and evaluated in this population even as vaccination programs are being implemented. This is an example of how vaccines are often not tested in Phase 1/2/3 clinical trials in the people most in need of protection. We argue that geriatricians, as frailty specialists, have much to contribute to the development, testing and implementation of COVID-19 vaccines in older adults. We discuss roles for geriatricians in ten stages of the vaccine development process, covering vaccine design, trial design, trial recruitment, establishment and interpretation of illness definitions, safety monitoring, consideration of relevant health measures such as frailty and function, analysis methods to account for frailty and differential vulnerability, contributions in regulatory and advisory roles, post-marketing surveillance, and program implementation and public health messaging. In presenting key recommendations pertinent to each stage, we hope to contribute to a dialogue on how to push the field of vaccinology to embrace the complexity of frailty. Making vaccines that can benefit frail older adults will benefit everyone in the fight against COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; frail elderly; frailty; geriatrics; vaccine
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33953551 PMCID: PMC8088982 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S295522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Roles for geriatricians arise across all stages in vaccine development, testing and implementation.
Summary of 10 Key Recommendations for Involving Geriatrics Expertise in COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Evaluation and Program Implementation
COVID-19 vaccine design should account for immunosenescence and the importance of cell-mediated immune responses in frail older adults. Particularly in later phases, vaccine trials should be designed to include (and not explicitly exclude) frail older people. Recruitment of frail older adults will be optimized when we consider how to best reach targeted participants and start with a relationship of trust. Atypical presentations of illness (more common in frail older adults) should be considered in COVID-19 vaccine trial case definitions, which are the foundation of vaccine efficacy calculations. When a study includes frail older adult participants, a geriatrician should be on the DSMB. Measures of health and outcomes (eg, frailty and function) that are relevant to frail older adults should be included in COVID-19 vaccine trials. Even when a measure of frailty has not been included up front in a clinical trial of COVID-19 vaccines, efforts should be made to account for frailty in statistical analyses (eg, use of a retrospectively generated frailty index or propensity score with stratified estimates of vaccine efficacy, immunogenicity, reactogenicity and safety). When regulatory and advisory decisions are being made concerning vaccines targeting frail older adults, geriatrics expertise should be included. Post-implementation surveillance and evaluation of COVID-19 vaccines should incorporate relevant health and outcome measures, such as frailty and function. Communication of age- and frailty-specific knowledge and evidence gaps is important to maintain trust in public health messaging about COVID-19 vaccination. |