When could human challenge trials be deployed to combat emerging infectious diseases? Lessons from the case of a Zika virus human challenge trial
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Afiliação Butantan
Afiliação externa
Tipo de documento
Article
Idioma
English
Direitos de acesso
Open access
Licença de uso
CC BY
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Resumo em inglês
Human challenge trials (HCTs) deliberately infect participants in order to test vaccines and treatments in a controlled setting, rather than enrolling individuals with natural exposure to a disease. HCTs are therefore potentially powerful tools to prepare for future outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases. Yet when an infectious disease is emerging, there is often substantial risk and uncertainty about its complications, and few available interventions, making an HCT ethically complex. In light of the need to consider ethical issues proactively as a part of epidemic preparedness, we use the case of a Zika virus HCT to explore whether and when HCTs might be ethically justified to combat emerging infectious diseases. We conclude that emerging infectious diseases could be appropriate candidates for HCTs and we identify relevant considerations and provide a case example to illustrate when they might be ethically acceptable.
Referência
Palacios R, Shah SK.. When could human challenge trials be deployed to combat emerging infectious diseases? Lessons from the case of a Zika virus human challenge trial. Trials. 2019 Dec;20(suppl. 2):702. doi:10.1186/s13063-019-3843-0.
URL permanente para citação desta referência
https://repositorio.butantan.gov.br/handle/butantan/2893
URL
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3843-0
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Data de publicação
2019
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Este item está licenciada sob uma Licença Creative Commons