Eric Topol is the co-author of this New York Times op-ed, dated Set. 22, 2020.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/ 09/22/opinion/covid-vaccine- coronavirus.html ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/22/opinion/covid-vaccine-coronavirus.html )

**********************************************************************
These Coronavirus Trials Don’t Answer the One Question We Need to Know
**********************************************************************

We may not find out whether the vaccines prevent moderate or severe cases of 
Covid-19.

By Peter Doshi and Eric Topol

Dr. Doshi is an associate professor at the University of Maryland School of 
Pharmacy. Dr. Topol is a professor of molecular medicine at Scripps Research.

* Sept. 22, 2020

If you were to approve a coronavirus vaccine, would you approve one that you 
only knew protected people only from the most mild form of Covid-19, or one 
that would prevent its serious complications?

The answer is obvious. You would want to protect against the worst cases.

But that’s not how the companies testing three of the leading coronavirus 
vaccine candidates, Moderna, Pfizer ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/17/health/covid-moderna-vaccine.html ) and 
AstraZeneca ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/19/health/astrazeneca-vaccine-safety-blueprints.html
 ) , whose U.S. trial is on hold, are approaching the problem.

According to the protocols for their studies, which they released late last 
week, a vaccine could meet the companies’ benchmark for success if it lowered 
the risk of mild Covid-19, but was never shown to reduce moderate or severe 
forms of the disease, or the risk of hospitalization, admissions to the 
intensive care unit or death.

To say a vaccine works should mean that most people no longer run the risk of 
getting seriously sick. That’s not what these trials will determine.

The Moderna ( 
https://www.modernatx.com/sites/default/files/mRNA-1273-P301-Protocol.pdf ) and 
AstraZeneca ( 
https://s3.amazonaws.com/ctr-med-7111/D8110C00001/52bec400-80f6-4c1b-8791-0483923d0867/c8070a4e-6a9d-46f9-8c32-cece903592b9/D8110C00001_CSP-v2.pdf
 ) studies will involve about 30,000 participants each; Pfizer’s ( 
https://pfe-pfizercom-d8-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/2020-09/C4591001_Clinical_Protocol.pdf
 ) will have 44,000. Half the participants will receive two doses of vaccines 
separated by three or four weeks, and the other half will receive saltwater 
placebo shots. The final determination of efficacy will occur after 150 to 160 
participants develop Covid-19. But that is only if the trials are allowed to 
run long enough. Pfizer will look at the accumulating data four times, Moderna 
twice and AstraZeneca once to determine if efficacy has been established, 
potentially leading to an early end to the trials.

Knowing how a clinical trial defines its primary endpoint — the measure used to 
determine a vaccine’s efficacy — is critical to understanding the knowledge it 
is built to discover. In the Moderna and Pfizer trials, even a mild case of 
Covid-19 — for instance, a cough plus a positive lab test — would qualify and 
muddy the results. AstraZeneca is slightly more stringent but would still count 
mild symptoms like a cough plus fever as a case. Only moderate or severe cases 
should be counted.

There are several reasons this is a problem.

First, mild Covid-19 is far more common than severe Covid-19, so most of the 
efficacy data is likely to pertain to mild disease. But there is no guarantee 
that reducing the risk of mild Covid-19 will also reduce the risk of moderate 
or severe Covid-19.

The reason is that the vaccine may not work equally well in frail and other 
at-risk populations. Healthy adults, who could form a majority of trial 
participants, might be less likely to get mild Covid-19, but adults over 65 — 
particularly those with significant frailty — might still get sick.

This is the case with influenza vaccines, which reduce the risk of mild disease 
in healthy adults. But there is no solid evidence they reduce the number of 
deaths, which occur largely among older people. In fact, significant increases 
in vaccination rates over the past decades have not been associated ( 
https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.165.3.265 ) with reductions in deaths.

Second, Moderna and Pfizer acknowledge their vaccines appear to induce side 
effects that are similar to the symptoms of mild Covid-19. In Pfizer’s early 
phase trial ( https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.17.20176651 ) , more than half of 
the vaccinated participants experienced headache, muscle pain and chills.

If the vaccines ultimately provide no benefit beyond a reduced risk of mild 
Covid-19, they could end up causing more discomfort than they prevent.

Third, even if the studies are allowed to run past their interim analyses, 
stopping a trial of 30,000 or 44,000 people after just 150 or so Covid-19 cases 
may make statistical sense, but it defies common sense. Giving a vaccine to 
hundreds of millions of healthy people based on such limited data requires a 
real leap of faith.

Declaring a winner without adequate evidence would also undermine the studies 
of other vaccines, as participants in those studies drop out to receive the 
newly approved vaccine. There may well be insufficient data to address the aged 
and underrepresented minorities. There will be no data for children, 
adolescents and pregnant women since they have been excluded. Vaccines must be 
thoroughly tested in all populations in which they will be used.

None of this is to say that these vaccines can’t reduce the risk of serious 
complications of Covid-19. But unless the trials are allowed to run long enough 
to address that question, we won’t know the answer.

The trials need to focus on the right clinical outcome — whether the vaccines 
protect against moderate and severe forms of Covid-19 — and be fully completed. 
It is not too late for the companies to do this, and the Food and Drug 
Administration, which reviewed the protocols, could still suggest modifications.

These are some of the most important clinical trials in history, affecting a 
vast majority of the planet’s population. It’s hard to imagine how much higher 
the stakes can be to get this right. Cutting corners should not be an option.

Peter Doshi ( https://faculty.rx.umaryland.edu/pdoshi/ ) is an associate 
professor of pharmaceutical health services research at the University of 
Maryland School of Pharmacy and an associate editor of The BMJ ( 
https://www.bmj.com/ ) , a medical journal. Eric Topol ( 
https://www.scripps.edu/faculty/topol/ ) is a professor of molecular medicine 
at Scripps Research, where he founded and directs the Translational Institute ( 
https://www.scripps.edu/science-and-medicine/translational-institute/ ) , which 
is focused on individualized medicine.


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