Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas

Abstract Ever since the emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), global public health infrastructures and systems, along with community-wide collaboration and service, have risen to an unprecedented challenge. Vaccine development was immediately propelled to the centre of all our scient...

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Main Authors: Manaf Alqahtani, Saad I. Mallah, Nigel Stevenson, Sally Doherty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:Trials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05597-8
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spelling doaj-851f6da4f9f44dc19b997d73d7bd8f702021-09-19T11:44:15ZengBMCTrials1745-62152021-09-012211910.1186/s13063-021-05597-8Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmasManaf Alqahtani0Saad I. Mallah1Nigel Stevenson2Sally Doherty3The National Taskforce for the Combating of the Coronavirus (COVID-19)The National Taskforce for the Combating of the Coronavirus (COVID-19)Department of Biochemistry and Immunology, Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College DublinResearch Ethics Committee, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland – BahrainAbstract Ever since the emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), global public health infrastructures and systems, along with community-wide collaboration and service, have risen to an unprecedented challenge. Vaccine development was immediately propelled to the centre of all our scientific, public health and community efforts. Despite the development of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines arguably being the greatest and most palpable achievements of the past 12 months, they have also been one of the most contentious and debated issues during the pandemic. However, what uniquely differentiates vaccine development is its intimate relationship with the community it seeks to serve; both in its clinical trial testing as an efficacious and safe prophylactic, and its post-developmental ‘roll-out’ success, as an effective public health tool. These relationships have birthed a myriad of complexities, from community-based mistrust, to academically contended ethical dilemmas. Indeed, the accelerated advances in the COVID-19 vaccine race have further exacerbated this phenomenon, bringing with it new ethical dilemmas that need to be examined to ensure the continued clinical success of these therapeutics and a renewed societal trust in clinical medicine. In this paper, we discuss two major ethical dilemmas: (1) the equipoise of continuing new vaccine trials in the advent of successful candidates and (2) the maleficence of blinded placebo arms. Accordingly, we discuss six different potential approaches to these ethical dilemmas: (1) continuing with placebo-controlled trials, (2) transitioning from placebo-controlled to open-label, (3) unblinding at-risk priority groups only, (4) transitioning to a blinded stepped-wedge cross-over design, (5) progressing to a blinded active-controlled stepped-wedge cross-over trial, and (6) conducting randomised stepped-wedge community trials. We also propose a decision-making algorithm for relevant stakeholders in advanced stages of vaccine trials. It is important to remember that the emergent nature of the COVID-19 situation does not justify a compromise on core ethical values. In fact, the discourse surrounding this topic and the decisions made will remain a potent case study and a continuously referenced example for all such future scenarios.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05597-8COVID-19Medical ethicsPandemicVaccinesClinical trials
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manaf Alqahtani
Saad I. Mallah
Nigel Stevenson
Sally Doherty
spellingShingle Manaf Alqahtani
Saad I. Mallah
Nigel Stevenson
Sally Doherty
Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
Trials
COVID-19
Medical ethics
Pandemic
Vaccines
Clinical trials
author_facet Manaf Alqahtani
Saad I. Mallah
Nigel Stevenson
Sally Doherty
author_sort Manaf Alqahtani
title Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
title_short Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
title_full Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
title_fullStr Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
title_full_unstemmed Vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
title_sort vaccine trials during a pandemic: potential approaches to ethical dilemmas
publisher BMC
series Trials
issn 1745-6215
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Ever since the emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), global public health infrastructures and systems, along with community-wide collaboration and service, have risen to an unprecedented challenge. Vaccine development was immediately propelled to the centre of all our scientific, public health and community efforts. Despite the development of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines arguably being the greatest and most palpable achievements of the past 12 months, they have also been one of the most contentious and debated issues during the pandemic. However, what uniquely differentiates vaccine development is its intimate relationship with the community it seeks to serve; both in its clinical trial testing as an efficacious and safe prophylactic, and its post-developmental ‘roll-out’ success, as an effective public health tool. These relationships have birthed a myriad of complexities, from community-based mistrust, to academically contended ethical dilemmas. Indeed, the accelerated advances in the COVID-19 vaccine race have further exacerbated this phenomenon, bringing with it new ethical dilemmas that need to be examined to ensure the continued clinical success of these therapeutics and a renewed societal trust in clinical medicine. In this paper, we discuss two major ethical dilemmas: (1) the equipoise of continuing new vaccine trials in the advent of successful candidates and (2) the maleficence of blinded placebo arms. Accordingly, we discuss six different potential approaches to these ethical dilemmas: (1) continuing with placebo-controlled trials, (2) transitioning from placebo-controlled to open-label, (3) unblinding at-risk priority groups only, (4) transitioning to a blinded stepped-wedge cross-over design, (5) progressing to a blinded active-controlled stepped-wedge cross-over trial, and (6) conducting randomised stepped-wedge community trials. We also propose a decision-making algorithm for relevant stakeholders in advanced stages of vaccine trials. It is important to remember that the emergent nature of the COVID-19 situation does not justify a compromise on core ethical values. In fact, the discourse surrounding this topic and the decisions made will remain a potent case study and a continuously referenced example for all such future scenarios.
topic COVID-19
Medical ethics
Pandemic
Vaccines
Clinical trials
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05597-8
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