Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/40302
metadata.artigo.dc.title: Human challenge studies to accelerate coronavirus vaccine licensure
metadata.artigo.dc.creator: Eyal, Nir
Lipsitch, Marc
Smith, Peter G.
metadata.artigo.dc.subject: Coronavirus
Vaccines
Human challenge studies
Randomized controlled trials
Risk-taking
Ethics
metadata.artigo.dc.publisher: Oxford Academic
metadata.artigo.dc.date.issued: Mar-2020
metadata.artigo.dc.identifier.citation: EYAL, N.; LIPSITCH, M.; SMITH, P. G. Human challenge studies to accelerate coronavirus vaccine licensure. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, [S.l.], Mar. 2020.
metadata.artigo.dc.description.abstract: Controlled human challenge trials of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidates could accelerate the testing and potential rollout of efficacious vaccines. By replacing conventional phase 3 testing of vaccine candidates, such trials may subtract many months from the licensure process, making efficacious vaccines available more quickly. Obviously, challenging volunteers with this live virus risks inducing severe disease and possibly even death. However, we argue that such studies, by accelerating vaccine evaluation, could reduce the global burden of coronavirus-related mortality and morbidity. Volunteers in such studies could autonomously authorize the risks to themselves, and their net risk could be acceptable if participants comprise healthy young adults, who are at relatively low risk of serious disease following natural infection, if they have a high baseline risk of natural infection, and if during the trial they receive frequent monitoring and, following any infection, the best available care.
metadata.artigo.dc.identifier.uri: https://academic.oup.com/jid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/infdis/jiaa152/5814216
http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/40302
metadata.artigo.dc.language: en_US
Appears in Collections:FCS - Artigos sobre Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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