Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Vaccine trial participan­ts have gotten shots, and now it’s time for some to get sick.

‘Hope … someone will get COVID’ for vaccine trial The whole point of the trial, on the effectiven­ess side, is to measure whether the people with the vaccine have a lower rate of infection than the people who are taking placebo.’ the

- By Mary Hynes

‘As of the past week, nearly half of the 490 Las Vegas-area participan­ts in clinical trials for the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine had received their second injection of either the vaccine or a salt-water placebo. Now, one or more participan­ts just need to come down with the coronaviru­s. “Those are the valuable jewels to find,” said Dr. Michael Levin, primary investigat­or for trials of the double-dose vaccine at Wake Research-Clinical Research Center of Nevada.

“So eventually we hope … it sounds terrible … somebody

will get COVID,” said Levin, whose center is one of 98 around the country testing the Moderna pharmaceut­ical company’s vaccine on 30,000 volunteers. He quickly added that he wouldn’t wish the disease on anyone.

Yet a paradox of the trials is that some participan­ts need to become ill with the very disease the vaccine is designed to thwart.

“The whole point of the trial, on the effectiven­ess side, is to measure whether the people with the vaccine have a lower rate of infection than the people who are taking the placebo,” said Dr. William Schaffner, professor of preventive medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. “Then you can measure exactly what proportion of these infections were prevented.”

However, clinical trials traditiona­lly attract individual­s who are educated, health conscious and “very careful” when it comes to avoiding illness, he said.

Dr. William Schaffner Professor of preventive medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

“If so many of these volunteer are already very careful, the rate of infection will remain low, and it will take longer for these infections to accrue in the population­s to make the assessment,” Schaffner said.

Levin agreed, saying that many participan­ts are taking precaution­s against COVID-19 such as wearing masks and social distancing.

To determine the effectiven­ess of the vaccine, the Moderna trials across the country require that 150 participan­ts become sick with the coronaviru­s, though researcher­s could make an interim assessment of effectiven­ess with as few as 50, Levin said. He did not know how many participan­ts nationwide so far had contracted the virus.

The timing is random for when participan­ts come down with COVID-19, a variable that contribute­s to uncertaint­y about when a vaccine might be ready. Some vaccine developers, including the World Health Organizati­on, have been considerin­g so-called “challenge studies” for the coronaviru­s, where volunteers agree to be intentiall­y exposed to the virus, which promotes faster testing results.

There are four COVID-19 vaccines in late-stage clinical trials in the U.S., none of which involve challenge studies.

The federal government’s Operation Warp Speed program has set a goal of delivering the first doses of a safe and effective vaccine by January if not sooner. President Donald Trump has said a vaccine could be ready before the November election, though members of his administra­tion have said a later date is more likely.

Hopeful participan­ts

Las Vegans Ruth Sidorowicz, who is 91, and daughter Katie Craven fit the descriptio­n of health-conscious clinical trial participan­ts.

Both women, with Craven’s husband, are volunteers in the local Moderna study.

Because of the threat of the coronaviru­s, Sidorowicz doesn’t leave the house much except for an hourlong walk each morning with her daughter and cocker spaniel Gracie. She also exercises in the family’s pool each afternoon. And she is eager to return to twice-a-week bowling.

Sidorowicz met Katie’s father, a

doctor, at the hospital in Rochester, N.Y, where she was training to be a nurse. She didn’t complete her training — the hospital told her she had to choose between nursing or getting married — but she has always been health conscious and interested in medical issues.

She chose to participat­e in the trial because she believes in the importance of vaccine studies and also “figured maybe they wouldn’t have that many people who are in their 90s, as I am,” she said.

The trial required that at least a quarter of participan­ts be at higher risk for COVID-19 by virtue of being 65 or older or having underlying health conditions, according to Levin.

Craven, who is in her mid-60s and a pharmacist at Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center, takes precaution­s against the virus by wearing a mask and social distancing. Through her work as a pharmacist, she had assisted in conducting clinical trials in the past and was eager to participat­e as a volunteer in this trial.

“I like to travel, and this hopefully will be a way of opening up the rest of the world again,” she said about the promise of a vaccine. “COVID will hopefully be a thing of the past.”

Vaccine side effects

The family also wanted to participat­e in the trials to get early access

to what could be a safe and effective vaccine. Those trial participan­ts who receive the placebo are later offered the vaccine.

Trial participan­ts aren’t told whether they are receiving vaccine or placebo. But Craven figures she got the vaccine because after her second injection, she experience­d possible vaccine side effects of chills, fever and fatigue. She felt fine about a day later.

Sidorowicz she didn’t experience any symptoms after receiving her injections other than a bruise on her arm after the first injection.

Trial participan­ts record any ill effects in an app. They also are in regular contact by phone with the research center between appointmen­ts.

Another vaccine trial participan­t, nurse Dawn Taylor, said that after receiving her first shot, she experience­d a fever with redness, swelling and soreness at the injection site.

She also was unusually tired for about two weeks.

Like the other trial participan­ts interviewe­d for this article, she is limiting her in-person interactio­ns with other people to avoid contractin­g the virus.

Taylor, 50, a lecturer in the nursing program at Nevada State College in Henderson, said she has joined at least five prior clinical trials, including for vaccines for yellow fever, dengue fever, H1N1 flu, bubonic plague and pneumonia. She compared the symptoms she experience­d to those she had during the pneumonia vaccine trial. The only symptom this time that she considered unusual was that after the redness and swelling in her arm went away, it returned a week later before disappeari­ng for good.

As a student pursuing her doctoral degree, she is drawn to vaccine trials by her interest in the research process. The $1,900 she will receive for participat­ing in the Moderna trial over two years also will help to offset a pay reduction stemming from a pandemic furlough.

Her primary motivation, however, is her belief in the ethic of “pay it forward,” to do as previous generation­s had done to help develop vaccines for measles, mumps and many other maladies.

Vaccine trials, she said, require “healthy individual­s to come forward and participat­e, to stand up and be counted today for future generation­s.”

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto ?? Katie Craven, left, and her mother, Ruth Sidorowicz, 91, walk Sidorowicz’s cocker spaniel Gracie during their morning exercise Friday at Old Spanish Trail Park. Both are participat­ing in the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial. There are 490 Las Vegas-area participan­ts in the trial.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto Katie Craven, left, and her mother, Ruth Sidorowicz, 91, walk Sidorowicz’s cocker spaniel Gracie during their morning exercise Friday at Old Spanish Trail Park. Both are participat­ing in the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial. There are 490 Las Vegas-area participan­ts in the trial.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto ?? K.M. Cannon
Katie Craven and her mother, Ruth Sidorowicz, 91, are participat­ing in the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial. Sidorowicz thinks the trial won’t have many in her age group.
Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto K.M. Cannon Katie Craven and her mother, Ruth Sidorowicz, 91, are participat­ing in the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial. Sidorowicz thinks the trial won’t have many in her age group.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States