Recently, Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) released a policy statement for the ethical conduct of Controlled Human Infection Studies (CHIS).
Infectious disease contributes about 30% of the disease burden in the country.
Many countries, including low-and middle-income countries such as Colombia, Kenya, Tanzania and Thailand, have carried out human challenge studies.
About |
Human clinical trials |
Human challenge studies |
Nature of exposure to pathogens by participants |
They are strongly advised to adopt and adhere to safety measures to avoid getting infected. |
Volunteers in a human challenge study are deliberately exposed to disease-causing pathogen |
Aim |
To study the safety and efficacy of drugs and vaccines |
To understand the various facets of infection and disease pathogenesis besides selecting the best candidate drug or vaccine |
Adverse effects |
Safety is evaluated for the first time in humans during the phase-1 stage of a traditional trial |
They face an additional risk when deliberately exposed to the pathogen. |
Implementation |
They are undertaken in four phases generally to test the efficacy. |
They are undertaken to study “less deadly diseases” such as influenza, dengue, typhoid, cholera and malaria |
References