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This topic aims at supporting activities that are contributing to one or several of the expected impacts for this call. To that end, proposals under this topic should aim for delivering results that are contributing to all the following expected outcomes:
During the COVID-19 pandemic the research community has seen the emergence and success of large-scale, multi-country adaptive platform trials to evaluate therapeutics for COVID-19. Adaptive platform trials have the ability to evaluate simultaneously multiple interventions in one trial answering multiple questions based on a master protocol[1]. The adaptive design of the trial provides the flexibility for promising new therapies to enter clinical evaluation and for poor-performing ones to discontinue based on interim evaluations, paving a pathway for efficient clinical trial research. Adaptive platform trials help to establish an efficient research ecosystem that can build clinical trial capacity for long-term sustainability in a coordinated and collaborative manner across institutions in different countries.
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown a lack of COVID-19-related large-scale clinical trials in sub-Saharan Africa, while this region could greatly benefit from more resource-efficient clinical trials that are investigating novel treatments for existing infectious diseases and that are able to react to future threats. Implementation of adaptive platform trials in sub-Saharan Africa has the potential to improve the identification of safe and efficacious interventions and save resources that are particularly scarce in this region of the world. In addition, the conduct of adaptive platform trials with the in-built operational ability to rapidly implement clinical evaluation of treatment options for when an epidemic-prone pathogen strikes, is key to being prepared for infectious disease epidemics or pandemics.
This topic aims to support the implementation of adaptive platform trials for the evaluation of candidate treatments for infectious diseases in sub-Saharan Africa. These trials should also be able to rapidly evaluate treatments in response to an emerging infectious disease threat.
Pathogens within the scope of this call topic are those that cause lower respiratory tract infections, emerging and re-emerging infections, neglected infectious diseases, and diarrheal diseases. Special attention should be paid to infections that lack treatment options or where treatments are inadequate. This includes for example infections that are hard to treat due to antimicrobial resistance. HIV, malaria and tuberculosis are excluded from this call topic due to previous investments in these areas.
As appropriate, using rapid multiplex platforms for diagnosis of parasitic, bacterial, fungal and/or viral infections should be considered,
The proposals should address all of the following:
Populations for intervention development and evaluation should also include vulnerable populations which need treatment options, including children, pregnant women, people with co-infections and co-morbidities, older people, and people living in hard-to-reach communities.
Collaboration and coordination with existing adaptive platform trials in Africa and Europe, EDCTP’s Networks of Excellence and other EDCTP funded initiatives is expected, where relevant.
Cross-cutting Priorities:Digital Agenda
Africa
Artificial Intelligence
International Cooperation
[1]https://www.nature.com/articles/s41573-019-0034-3.pdf
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