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Novel Ordered Stepped-Wedge Cluster Trial Designs for Detecting Ebola Vaccine Efficacy Using a Spatially Structured Mathematical Model

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Diakite, Ibrahim, Eric Q. Mooring, Gustavo E. Velásquez, and Megan B. Murray. 2016. “Novel Ordered Stepped-Wedge Cluster Trial Designs for Detecting Ebola Vaccine Efficacy Using a Spatially Structured Mathematical Model.” PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 10 (8): e0004866. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0004866. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004866.

Abstract

Background: During the 2014 Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak, policy-makers were confronted with difficult decisions on how best to test the efficacy of EVD vaccines. On one hand, many were reluctant to withhold a vaccine that might prevent a fatal disease from study participants randomized to a control arm. On the other, regulatory bodies called for rigorous placebo-controlled trials to permit direct measurement of vaccine efficacy prior to approval of the products. A stepped-wedge cluster study (SWCT) was proposed as an alternative to a more traditional randomized controlled vaccine trial to address these concerns. Here, we propose novel “ordered stepped-wedge cluster trial” (OSWCT) designs to further mitigate tradeoffs between ethical concerns, logistics, and statistical rigor. Methodology/Principal Findings We constructed a spatially structured mathematical model of the EVD outbreak in Sierra Leone. We used the output of this model to simulate and compare a series of stepped-wedge cluster vaccine studies. Our model reproduced the observed order of first case occurrence within districts of Sierra Leone. Depending on the infection risk within the trial population and the trial start dates, the statistical power to detect a vaccine efficacy of 90% varied from 14% to 32% for standard SWCT, and from 67% to 91% for OSWCTs for an alpha error of 5%. The model’s projection of first case occurrence was robust to changes in disease natural history parameters. Conclusions/Significance: Ordering clusters in a step-wedge trial based on the cluster’s underlying risk of infection as predicted by a spatial model can increase the statistical power of a SWCT. In the event of another hemorrhagic fever outbreak, implementation of our proposed OSWCT designs could improve statistical power when a step-wedge study is desirable based on either ethical concerns or logistical constraints.

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Medicine and Health Sciences, Clinical Medicine, Clinical Trials, Cluster Trials, Pharmacology, Drug Research and Development, Biology and Life Sciences, Immunology, Vaccination and Immunization, Vaccines, Public and Occupational Health, Preventive Medicine, Tropical Diseases, Neglected Tropical Diseases, Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers, Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever, Infectious Diseases, Viral Diseases, Infectious Disease Control, People and places, Geographical locations, Africa, Sierra Leone, People and Places, Geographical Locations, Liberia, Demography, Death Rates, Population Biology, Population Metrics

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