Literature DB >> 34041932

COVID-19 vaccine trials: The potential for "hybrid" analyses.

Thomas R Fleming1, Martha Nason2, Philip R Krause3, Ira M Longini4, Ana-Maria Henao-Restrepo5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although several COVID-19 vaccines have been found to be effective in rigorous evaluation and have emerging availability in parts of the world, their supply will be inadequate to meet international needs for a considerable period of time. There also will be continued interest in vaccines that are more effective or have improved scalability to facilitate mass vaccination campaigns. Ongoing clinical testing of new vaccines also will be needed as variant strains continue to emerge that may elude some aspects of immunity induced by current vaccines. Randomized clinical trials meaningfully enhance the efficiency and reliability of such clinical testing. In clinical settings with limited or no access to known effective vaccines, placebo-controlled randomized trials of new vaccines remain a preferred approach to maximize the reliability, efficiency and interpretability of results. When emerging availability of licensed vaccines makes it no longer possible to use a placebo control, randomized active comparator non-inferiority trials may enable reliable insights.
METHODS: In this article, "hybrid" methods are proposed to address settings where, during the conduct of a placebo-controlled trial, a judgment is made to replace the placebo arm by a licensed COVID-19 vaccine due to emerging availability of effective vaccines in regions participating in that trial. These hybrid methods are based on proposed statistics that aggregate evidence to formally test as well as to estimate the efficacy of the experimental vaccine, by combining placebo-controlled data during the first period of trial conduct with active-controlled data during the second period.
RESULTS: Application of the proposed methods is illustrated in two important scenarios where the active control vaccine would become available in regions engaging in the experimental vaccine's placebo-controlled trial: in the first, the active comparator's vaccine efficacy would have been established to be 50%-70% for the 4- to 6-month duration of follow-up of its placebo-controlled trial; in the second, the active comparator's vaccine efficacy would have been established to be 90%-95% during that duration. These two scenarios approximate what has been seen with adenovirus vaccines or mRNA vaccines, respectively, assuming the early estimates of vaccine efficacy for those vaccines would hold over longer-term follow-up.
CONCLUSION: The proposed hybrid methods could readily play an important role in the near future in the design, conduct and analysis of randomized clinical trials performed to address the need for multiple additional vaccines reliably established to be safe and have worthwhile efficacy in reducing the risk of symptomatic disease from SARS-CoV-2 infections.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; active comparator; margin; non-inferiority; placebo-controlled; vaccines

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34041932     DOI: 10.1177/17407745211018613

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Trials        ISSN: 1740-7745            Impact factor:   2.486


  3 in total

1.  A systematic review of Vaccine Breakthrough Infections by SARS-CoV-2 Delta Variant.

Authors:  Mengxin Zhang; Ying Liang; Dongsheng Yu; Bang Du; Weyland Cheng; Lifeng Li; Zhidan Yu; Shuying Luo; Yaodong Zhang; Huanmin Wang; Xianwei Zhang; Wancun Zhang
Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2022-01-01       Impact factor: 6.580

2.  Axillary adenopathy after COVID-19 vaccine in patients undergoing breast ultrasound.

Authors:  Sara De Giorgis; Alessandro Garlaschi; Nicole Brunetti; Simona Tosto; Giuseppe Rescinito; Francesco Monetti; Claudio Oddone; Barbara Massa; Francesca Pitto; Massimo Calabrese; Alberto Stefano Tagliafico
Journal:  J Ultrason       Date:  2021-12-15

Review 3.  WHO guidance on COVID-19 vaccine trial designs in the context of authorized COVID-19 vaccines and expanding global access: Ethical considerations.

Authors:  Jerome Amir Singh; Sonali Kochhar; Jonathan Wolff; Caesar Atuire; Anant Bhan; Ezekiel Emanuel; Ruth Faden; Prakash Ghimire; Dirceu Greco; Calvin Ho; Suerie Moon; Ehsan Shamsi-Gooshki; Aissatou Touré; Beatriz Thomé; Maxwell J Smith; Ross E G Upshur
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 3.641

  3 in total

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