Proceedings (May 2020)

Need for Local Laboratory Reference Values in Recruitment into Studies of Emerging Infectious Diseases: Insight from Participant Screening for an Ebola Vaccine Trial in a Rural African Setting

  • David Ishola,
  • Bailah Leigh,
  • Emma Hancox,
  • Hannah Hafezi,
  • Dickens Kowuor,
  • Brian Kohn,
  • Daniel Tindanbil,
  • Kwabena Owusu-Kyei,
  • Muhammed Afolabi,
  • Frank Baiden,
  • Baimba Rogers,
  • Alimamy Serry-Bangura,
  • Agnes Bangura,
  • Tuda Otieno,
  • Daniela Manno,
  • Philip Ayieko,
  • Mohamed Samai,
  • Brett Lowe,
  • Brian Greenwood,
  • Deborah Watson-Jones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2020045008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 1
p. 8

Abstract

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Introduction: The EBOVAC-Salone trial of a candidate Ebola two-dose vaccine regimen (Ad.ZEBOV/MVA-BN-Filo) was conducted in a research-naïve setting in rural northern Sierra Leone, where no local laboratory reference values (LRV) had been established. In the first stage (n = 43) of the trial, laboratory screening was based on internationally-derived protocol LRV (PLRV). For postrecruitment participant care, LRV derived from a West African population (WALRV) were used. We assessed what difference using WALRV rather than PLRV for screening might have made to the eligibility of volunteers. METHODS: We reviewed the laboratory screening results of study volunteers. Red blood cells (RBC), white blood cells (WBC), platelets (PTT), haemoglobin, haematocrit, creatinine, and alanine (ALT) and aspartate (AST) transaminases were measured. Overall and for each parameter, we compared the actually eligible proportion of volunteers using PLRV with the potentially eligible proportion using WALRV. Results: Of 102 (82 males, 20 females) volunteers, overall 55 (53.9% males) met PLRV eligibility criteria for inclusion, compared with 91 (89.2% males) who were within WALRV normal limits (p p p p = 0.0093). Levels of creatinine and ALT did not present any differences. Discussion: Use of WALRV in eligibility assessment would potentially have led to considerable differences in the baseline laboratory characteristics of enrolled volunteers. Clinical trials are increasingly common and crucial in emerging infectious disease research. Our findings underscore the importance of locally-derived LRV in clinical trials in sub-Saharan Africa, to avoid excluding potentially eligible study volunteers, and to better support routine clinical care and safety assessments. Appropriately designed studies are needed in each region to establish local LRV.

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