Assessing the feasibility of Nipah vaccine efficacy trials based on previous outbreaks in Bangladesh

被引:15
作者
Nikolay, Birgit [1 ]
dos Santos, Gabriel Ribeiro [2 ]
Lipsitch, Marc [3 ]
Rahman, Mahmudur
Luby, Stephen P. [4 ]
Salje, Henrik [2 ]
Gurley, Emily S. [5 ]
Cauchemez, Simon [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Pasteur, Math Modelling Infect Dis Unit, CNRS, UMR2000, F-75015 Paris, France
[2] Univ Cambridge, Dept Genet, Cambridge, England
[3] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA USA
[4] Stanford Univ, Infect Dis & Geog Med Div, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[5] Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Baltimore, MD USA
关键词
Nipah virus; Vaccine trial; Emerging pathogens; VIRUS; DESIGN; TRANSMISSION; CLUSTER; PATHOGENS; EPIDEMIC; POWER;
D O I
10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.08.027
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Background: Nipah virus (NiV) is an emerging, bat-borne pathogen that can be transmitted from person -to-person. Vaccines are currently being developed for NiV, and studies have been funded to evaluate their safety and immunogenicity. An important unanswered question is whether it will be possible to evaluate the efficacy of vaccine candidates in phase III clinical trials in a context where spillovers from the zoono-tic reservoir are infrequent and associated with small outbreaks. The objective of this study was to inves-tigate the feasibility of conducting a phase III vaccine trial in Bangladesh, the only country regularly reporting NiV cases. Methods: We used simulations based on previously observed NiV cases from Bangladesh, an assumed vaccine efficacy of 90% and other NiV vaccine target characteristics, to compare three vaccination study designs: (i) cluster randomized ring vaccination, (ii) cluster randomized mass vaccination, and (iii) an observational case-control study design. Results: The simulations showed that, assuming a ramp-up period of 10 days and a mean hospitalization delay of 4 days,a cluster-randomized ring vaccination trial would require 516 years and over 163,000 vac-cine doses to run a ring vaccination trial under current epidemic conditions. A cluster-randomized mass vaccination trial in the two most affected districts would take 43 years and 1.83 million vaccine doses. An observational case-control design in these two districts would require seven years and 2.5 million vaccine doses. Discussion: Without a change in the epidemiology of NiV, ring vaccination or mass vaccination trials are unlikely to be completed within a reasonable time window. In this light, the remaining options are: (i) not conducting a phase III trial until the epidemiology of NiV changes, (ii) identifying alternative ways to licensure such as observational studies or controlled studies in animals such as in the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Animal Rule. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:5600 / 5606
页数:7
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], WHO TARGET PRODUCT P
[2]   Outbreak Investigation of Nipah Virus Disease in Kerala, India, 2018 [J].
Arunkumar, Govindakarnavar ;
Chandni, Radhakrishnan ;
Mourya, Devendra T. ;
Singh, Sujeet K. ;
Sadanandan, Rajeev ;
Sudan, Preeti ;
Bhargava, Balram ;
Gangakhedkar, Raman R. ;
Gupta, Nivedita ;
Bhargava, Balram ;
Mourya, D. T. ;
Yadav, Pragya D. ;
Shete, Anita M. ;
Sahay, Reema ;
Sudeep, A. ;
Bharadwaj, Sumit ;
Sugunan, A. P. ;
Manickam, P. ;
Bhatnagar, Tarun ;
Murhekar, Manoj ;
Arunkumar, Govindakarnavar ;
Abdulmajeed, Jazeel ;
Aswathyraj, Sushama ;
Santhosha, Devadiga ;
Anup, Jayaram ;
Sudheesh, Nittur ;
Anitha, Jagdesh ;
Robin, S. ;
Sabeena, Sasidharanpillai ;
Shakir, Muhammed ;
Sarthak, Pattanaik ;
Suresh, Prabhu ;
Maity, Hindol ;
Sheik, Shahin ;
Shilpa, C. ;
Karunakaran, Kavitha ;
Anjali, Aithal ;
Kumar, Sanjeeva ;
Venkatesh, Srinivasan ;
Ravindran, P. ;
Singh, Sujeet Kumar ;
Gupta, Naveen ;
Kulkarni, Sanket ;
Raghu, K. ;
Ali, M. K. Showkath ;
Jain, Ruchi ;
Chandra, Ramesh ;
Kiran, Jai ;
Khasnobis, Pradeep ;
Jain, S. K. .
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2019, 219 (12) :1867-1878
[3]   First vaccine approval under the FDA Animal Rule [J].
Beasley, David W. C. ;
Brasel, Trevor L. ;
Comer, Jason E. .
NPJ VACCINES, 2016, 1
[4]   Statistical power and validity of Ebola vaccine trials in Sierra Leone: a simulation study of trial design and analysis [J].
Bellan, Steven E. ;
Pulliam, Juliet R. C. ;
Pearson, Carl A. B. ;
Champredon, David ;
Fox, Spencer J. ;
Skrip, Laura ;
Galvani, Alison P. ;
Gambhir, Manoj ;
Lopman, Ben A. ;
Porco, Travis C. ;
Meyers, Lauren Ancel ;
Dushoff, Jonathan .
LANCET INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2015, 15 (06) :703-710
[5]   CEPI: preparing for the worst [J].
Burki, Talha .
LANCET INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2017, 17 (03) :265-266
[6]   Licensure of vaccines using the Animal Rule [J].
Burns, Drusilla L. .
CURRENT OPINION IN VIROLOGY, 2012, 2 (03) :353-356
[7]   Real-time dynamic modelling for the design of a cluster-randomized phase 3 Ebola vaccine trial in Sierra Leone [J].
Camacho, A. ;
Eggo, R. M. ;
Goeyvaerts, N. ;
Vandebosch, A. ;
Mogg, R. ;
Funk, S. ;
Kucharski, A. J. ;
Watson, C. H. ;
Vangeneugden, T. ;
Edmunds, W. I. .
VACCINE, 2017, 35 (04) :544-551
[8]   Nipah virus-assodiated encephalitis outbreak, Siliguri, India [J].
Chadha, MS ;
Comer, JA ;
Lowe, L ;
Rota, PA ;
Rollin, PE ;
Bellini, WJ ;
Ksiazek, TG ;
Mishra, AC .
EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2006, 12 (02) :235-240
[9]   The Use of Test-negative Controls to Monitor Vaccine Effectiveness A Systematic Review of Methodology [J].
Chua, Huiying ;
Feng, Shuo ;
Lewnard, Joseph A. ;
Sullivan, Sheena G. ;
Blyth, Christopher C. ;
Lipsitch, Marc ;
Cowling, Benjamin J. .
EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2020, 31 (01) :43-64
[10]   A new dependence parameter approach to improve the design of cluster randomized trials with binary outcomes [J].
Crespi, Catherine M. ;
Wong, Weng Kee ;
Wu, Sheng .
CLINICAL TRIALS, 2011, 8 (06) :687-698