“Right now, we’re reinventing the wheel every time,” Halasa said. “Through this eye-opening workshop and speaking with elected representatives and congressional staffers, I appreciate the value of a national network.”
VISPR aims to define and reduce the local and international burden of acute respiratory and gastrointestinal infections in children, particularly infants and immunocompromised children.
Twenty years ago, when she first attempted to generate vaccine data for immunocompromised patients, “there was no network — the network was my friends,” Halasa recalled.
She and VISPR researchers have completed trials seeking the optimal influenza-preventive vaccination strategy for children and adults who have received bone marrow or solid organ transplants.
“We showed that in bone marrow transplant patients, two doses of high-dose vaccine are superior to two doses of standard dose — but we realized we still don’t know the best strategy early in the transplant period,” she said.
Halasa has secured three NIH awards to address that question in adult and pediatric BMT patients and in lung transplant patients.
“We’ve been doing these types of studies for over a decade, but this concept started in 2019, and now, five years later, we’re about to enroll our first patient,” Halasa said. “We might not have an answer for another four years.”
But with the established infrastructure and experts of a trial network, Halasa estimates that the trials she has planned could be conducted concurrently, perhaps in as little as one year. And, such a network could enable the equally important dissemination of trial results to the clinicians making treatment and preventive recommendations, she said.
Workshop addresses challenges, potential solutions
The ImmunOptimize workshop and concept is following a similar path lead by BMT experts that helped spur the formation of the NIH-funded Blood & Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network. Hill compared the state of clinical trials for infectious diseases in immunocompromised patients to the fragmented state of clinical trials for bone marrow transplant patients two decades prior.
“There were limited mechanisms to move promising findings made by individual investigators to the field for large-scale testing and validation. We have similar challenges now,” he said.
He hopes that the ImmunOptimize workshop will inspire a similar network. At the workshop, infectious disease clinicians and researchers, representatives from the FDA, BARDA (the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority) and the CDC, pharmaceutical industry representatives and patient advocates met to discuss the barriers and solutions to the data gap faced by people with weakened immune systems.
Boeckh noted that while many important puzzle pieces already exist, the infrastructure that puts the pieces together in a sustainable, systematic way is missing.