“As someone who has specialized in genetic diversity my whole career, I’m used to HIV vaccines failing, because the vaccine is too far away from the viruses. These vaccines are on top of the virus,” Gilbert said. “We definitely knew we were in a totally different realm than HIV.”
In late February, a new single-dose vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson will likely win an endorsement for an Emergency Use Authorization by the US Food and Drug Administration, which in December gave the go-ahead to the Moderna and Pfizer dual-dose vaccines.
Ultimately, drug companies are responsible for the designs of their studies. While Pfizer charted its own path and privately funded its vaccine trial, the Moderna and J&J studies have been carried out in collaboration with CoVPN, which is also coordinating design and analysis of U.S.-sponsored trials of the AstraZeneca and Novavax vaccines, expected to be completed this spring.
Detail-oriented people
No stranger to biostatistics, Peter Gilbert is the son of Drs. Ethel and Richard Gilbert, an earlier generation of University of Washington statisticians.
“My mother is the famous one,” Gilbert said. She was a UW assistant professor in the 1960s and has won numerous awards for her work on the risk of radiation-induced cancers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the National Cancer Institute.
A math major at UW, Gilbert said his parents did not push him toward any direction. But during his college days, he became interested in HIV/AIDS.
“I wanted to make a difference,” he said. “I just had some kind of fire to work on this disease, and then it was just kind of natural to meld math with that, because that’s what I knew.”
While a knack for math is common in his field, Gilbert said that the common denominator among his colleagues is meticulous attention to every part of a problem.
“We’re detailed oriented people,” he said.
The legacy of UW Department of Biostatistics looms large at Fred Hutch and HVTN. The department’s reputation was built by giants in the biostatistics field including Drs. Norman Breslow and Thomas Fleming. Dr. Ross Prentice, who — like Breslow and Fleming — has an important biostatistical test named after him, is former vice president and director of the Hutch’s Public Health Sciences Division and retains his long ties to the UW program as a biostatistics professor.
Before he launched the virology program at Fred Hutch, Corey built his career in HIV science at UW, and he continues his close relationships with the university’s faculty in his current vaccine work. When the coronavirus struck America first in Seattle, the expertise was there, too, waiting for it.
“I think of HVTN as a kind of machine that was poised and ready to go,” said Hutch biostatistician Dr. Holly Janes. She is a co-principal investigator of the Statistics and Data Management Center at the network along with Gilbert and Dr. Yunda Huang.
Janes said that HVTN operates differently from other clinical trial coordinators in that it taps its biostatistical expertise at the earliest stages of study design.
“What biostatisticians bring to the table is that we pose testable questions. Our training helps us take scientific questions, translate them into very precise terms and measurements, and develop analytic strategies to address them,” Janes said.
Correlates of protection
Because variation is a constant in biology, it is a complicated task to discern how results of tests involving a sample of a population can be applied to everyone. Meaningful signals in study results need to be separated from random, meaningless data — what statisticians call “noise.” So, it is important from the start to design a study of sufficient size that the final results will be definitive and can’t be attributed to chance.
More complicated is to structure studies so they can tease out useful biological measurements — such as specific levels of antibodies or infection fighting blood cells — that coincide with success in preventing disease. These are called “correlates of protection.”
Baked into the design of these first COVID-19 trials are requirements for companies to store specimens, such a blood and nasal swabs from participants, so independent labs under CoVPN can find these correlates. By identifying and using these correlates as substitutes for the time-consuming and tragic process of tallying rates of disease and death, next generation COVID-19 vaccine trials can be smaller and quicker.
“It will mean those future trials will need just several hundred people and take three months, instead of 30,000 people and six months,” Janes said.