Making a COVID-19 vaccine that works for everyone: ensuring equity and inclusivity in clinical trials

Toby Pepperrell, Florence Rodgers, Pranav Tandon, Kelly Sarsfield, Molly Pugh-Jones, Theo Rashid, Sarai Keestra

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mortality and morbidity have been shown to increase with deprivation and impact non-White ethnicities more severely. Despite the extra risk Black, Asian and Minority Ethnicity (BAME) groups face in the pandemic, our current medical research system seems to prioritise innovation aimed at people of European descent. We found significant difficulties in assessing baseline demographics in clinical trials for COVID-19 vaccines, displaying a lack of transparency in reporting. Further, we found that most of these trials take place in high-income countries, with only 25 of 219 trials (11.4%) taking place in lower middle- or low-income countries. Trials for the current best vaccine candidates (BNT162b2, ChadOx1, mRNA-173) recruited 80.0% White participants. Underrepresentation of BAME groups in medical research will perpetuate historical distrust in healthcare processes, and poses a risk of unknown differences in efficacy and safety of these vaccines by phenotype. Limiting trial demographics and settings will mean a lack of global applicability of the results of COVID-19 vaccine trials, which will slow progress towards ending the pandemic.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1892309
Pages (from-to)1892309
JournalGlobal health action
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2021

Keywords

  • Covid-19
  • clinical trials
  • ethnic minorities
  • health equity
  • vaccines

Cite this