Modeling the disruption of respiratory disease clinical trials by non-pharmaceutical COVID-19 interventions

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Abstract

Respiratory disease trials are profoundly affected by non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) against COVID-19 because they perturb existing regular patterns of all seasonal viral epidemics. To address trial design with such uncertainty, we developed an epidemiological model of respiratory tract infection (RTI) coupled to a mechanistic description of viral RTI episodes. We explored the impact of reduced viral transmission (mimicking NPIs) using a virtual population and in silico trials for the bacterial lysate OM-85 as prophylaxis for RTI. Ratio-based efficacy metrics are only impacted under strict lockdown whereas absolute benefit already is with intermediate NPIs (eg. mask-wearing). Consequently, despite NPI, trials may meet their relative efficacy endpoints (provided recruitment hurdles can be overcome) but are difficult to assess with respect to clinical relevance. These results advocate to report a variety of metrics for benefit assessment, to use adaptive trial design and adapted statistical analyses. They also question eligibility criteria misaligned with the actual disease burden.

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APA

Arsène, S., Couty, C., Faddeenkov, I., Go, N., Granjeon-Noriot, S., Šmít, D., … Kulesza, A. (2022). Modeling the disruption of respiratory disease clinical trials by non-pharmaceutical COVID-19 interventions. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29534-8

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