Canadian Center for Vaccinology, IWK Health, Nova Scotia Health and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada.
Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada.
Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2022 Nov 30;18(6):2104019. doi: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2104019. Epub 2022 Jul 26.
Exclusion of pregnant and breastfeeding women from the pivotal randomized controlled trials for COVID-19 vaccines that led to emergency regulatory approval created gaps in data needed for vaccine policy, healthcare provider recommendations, and women's decisions about vaccination. We argue that such knowledge gaps increase potential for vaccine hesitancy and misinformation relating to the health of women and infants, and that these gaps in evidence are avoidable. Over several decades, ethical and scientific guidance, scholarship, and advocacy in favor of pregnant and breastfeeding women's participation in clinical development of vaccines has accumulated. Guidance on how to include pregnant and breastfeeding women in vaccine trials ethically and safely predates the COVID-19 pandemic but has yet to be routinely incorporated in vaccine development. We highlight the important role regulatory authorities could play in requiring that pregnant and breastfeeding women be eligible as volunteer participants in prelicensure vaccine trials for products that are expected to be used in this population. Inclusion of pregnant and breastfeeding populations in clinical trials leading to market approval or emergency use authorization should be undertaken early or concurrently at the time of trials in the general population.
由于 COVID-19 疫苗的关键随机对照试验排除了孕妇和哺乳期妇女,导致疫苗政策、医疗保健提供者建议以及妇女关于接种疫苗的决策所需的数据存在空白。我们认为,这种知识空白增加了与妇女和婴儿健康相关的疫苗犹豫和错误信息的可能性,而这些证据空白是可以避免的。几十年来,关于支持孕妇和哺乳期妇女参与疫苗临床开发的伦理和科学指导、学术研究和宣传已经积累起来。关于如何以伦理和安全的方式将孕妇和哺乳期妇女纳入疫苗试验的指导意见早在 COVID-19 大流行之前就已经存在,但尚未在疫苗开发中常规纳入。我们强调了监管机构可以发挥的重要作用,要求将孕妇和哺乳期妇女作为有资格的志愿者参与预期用于该人群的产品的上市前疫苗试验。在向市场批准或紧急使用授权的临床试验中,应在一般人群的临床试验同时或尽早纳入孕妇和哺乳期人群。