St George's University: Health experts have warned that a greater flexibility must be brought to
medical trials to combat diseases like Ebola to avoid facing another
nightmare outbreak. The rapidity and spread of the Ebola outbreak and the urgency of a
response led to many challenges not least of which was to advise those
managing people on the ground of the best way to treat the illness and
which treatments might be effective. The conventional design of medical trials may have been too time
consuming, and demand recruitment of too many patients for what was a
very urgent situation. The experts have urged a greater flexibility be
used in future.
One of the experts, Professor Sanjeev Krishna, of St George’s
University of London’s Infection and Immunity Institute, said: “The
challenges posed by the current Ebola outbreak affect all types of
interventions. These include difficulties in evaluating new potential
drugs, vaccines and diagnostics especially when the numbers of
individuals who are infected can change quickly from day to day or week
to week.
“To design really useful and informative trials that can give results
to change practice in this and any future outbreaks, we suggest highly
flexible, but nevertheless, powerful designs that can adapt to changing
patterns of infection and mortality."
Writing in the prestigious medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases,
the medical experts and academics say: “Even if somehow the present
epidemic is eventually contained (over a time course that is currently
uncertain), the world will still be largely unprepared for the next
epidemic that could strike again at any time in an equally explosive
manner.”
The Ebola outbreak that has devastated parts of west Africa
represents an unprecedented challenge for research and ethics. Estimates
from the past three decades emphasise that the present effort to
contain the epidemic in the three most affected countries (Guinea,
Liberia, and Sierra Leone) has been insufficient, with more than 24 900
cases and about 10,300 deaths, as of March 25, 2015.
Faced with such an exceptional event and the urgent response it
demands, the use of conventional randomised controlled trials (RCT) for
Ebola-related research are considered by some to be both unethical and
infeasible. Others suggest that potential interventions should be
assessed in non-randomised studies on the basis of compassionate use -
giving patients what doctors think might work. However, these
non-randomised studies might not yield valid conclusions, leading to
large residual uncertainty about how to interpret results. It can also
waste scarce intervention-related resources by not answering fundamental
questions about their value, making them unethical in some people’s
eyes.
Scientifically sound and rigorous study designs, such as adaptive
RCTs, could provide the best way to reduce the time needed to develop
new interventions and to obtain valid results on their efficacy and
safety while preserving the application of ethical precepts. They should
be included in the tool-kit against emerging infections.