Typhoid-Causing Bacteria are Becoming More Resistant to Essential Antibiotics, Says Lancet Study

According to the study, antibiotics can be used to successfully treat typhoid fever infections, but their effectiveness is threatened by the emergence of resistant S. Typhi strains.

Boston: Bacteria causing Typhoid fever are becoming increasingly resistant to some of the most important antibiotics for human health, according to a study published in The Lancet Microbe journal.

The largest-ever genome analysis of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhi) also shows that resistant strains – almost all originating in South Asia – have spread to other countries nearly 200 times since 1990.

The researchers noted that Typhoid fever is a global public health concern, causing 11 million infections and more than 1,00,000 deaths per year.

While it is most prevalent in South Asia, which accounts for 70% of the global disease burden, it also has significant impacts in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and Oceania, highlighting the need for a global response, they said.

Antibiotics can be used to successfully treat typhoid fever infections, but their effectiveness is threatened by the emergence of resistant S. Typhi strains.

Analysis of the rise and spread of resistant S. Typhi has, so far, been limited, with most studies based on small samples.

“The speed at which highly-resistant strains of S. Typhi have emerged and spread in recent years is a real cause for concern, and highlights the need to urgently expand prevention measures, particularly in countries at greatest risk,” said the study’s lead author, Jason Andrews, from Stanford University.

“At the same time, the fact that resistant strains of S. Typhi have spread internationally so many times also underscores the need to view typhoid control, and antibiotic resistance more generally, as a global rather than local problem,” Andrews said.

In the new study, the researchers performed whole-genome sequencing on 3,489 S. Typhi isolates obtained from blood samples collected between 2014-2019 from people in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan with confirmed cases of typhoid fever.

Also read: Antimicrobial Resistance Is a Serious Threat To Public Health in India

A collection of 4,169 S. Typhi samples isolated from more than 70 countries between 1905 and 2018 was also sequenced and included in the analysis.

Resistance-conferring genes in the 7,658 sequenced genomes were identified using genetic databases.

Strains were classified as multidrug-resistant (MDR) if they contained genes giving resistance to classical front-line antibiotics ampicillin, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole.

The authors also traced the presence of genes conferring resistance to macrolides and quinolones, which are among the most critically important antibiotics for human health.

The analysis shows resistant S. Typhi strains have spread between countries at least 197 times since 1990.

While these strains most often occurred within South Asia and from South Asia to Southeast Asia, East and Southern Africa, they have also been reported in the UK, US, and Canada, the researchers said.

Since 2000, MDR S. Typhi has declined steadily in Bangladesh and India, and remained low in Nepal, though it has increased slightly in Pakistan.

However, these are being replaced by strains resistant to other antibiotics, the researchers said. For example, gene mutations giving resistance to quinolones have arisen and spread at least 94 times since 1990, with nearly all of these (97%) originating from South Asia.

The study found that quinolone-resistant strains accounted for more than 85% of S. Typhi in Bangladesh by the early 2000s, increasing to more than 95% in India, Pakistan, and Nepal by 2010.

Mutations causing resistance to azithromycin, a widely-used macrolide antibiotic, have emerged at least seven times in the past 20 years.

In Bangladesh, strains containing these mutations emerged around 2013 and since then, their population size has steadily increased.

The findings add to recent evidence of the rapid rise and spread of S. Typhi strains resistant to third-generation cephalosporins, another class of antibiotics critically important for human health.

The authors acknowledge some limitations to their study.

There remains an under-representation of S. Typhi sequences from several regions, particularly many countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania, where typhoid is endemic. More sequences from these regions are needed to improve understanding of timing and patterns of spread, they said.

As S. Typhi genomes only cover a fraction of all typhoid fever cases, estimates of resistance-causing mutations and international spread are likely underestimated, according to the researchers.

These potential underestimates highlight the need to expand genomic surveillance to provide a more comprehensive window into the emergence, expansion, and spread of antibiotic-resistant organisms, they added.

Vaccines Have Always Encountered Resistance Before Wide Acceptance

Nationalism, ‘self-reliance’ and fear of foreign ‘machinations’ have added a new element to the resistance against vaccines.

This article has been withdrawn by the editors because it drew heavily on three previously published works, “The History of Vaccines“, a website run by the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “A Brief History of Vaccines and Vaccination in India” by Chandrakant Lahariya [Indian Journal of Medical Research (April 2014)] and “‘Free’ Vaccines Aren’t Free Of The Foreign Hand” without acknowledging and attributing them in any way.

#TyphoidMary – Now a Hashtag – Was a Maligned Immigrant Who Got a Bad Rap

#TyphoidMary is shorthand today for those who defy social distancing orders. The real Typhoid Mary is perhaps the most prominent example in the US of the unknowing disease carrier.

The country’s most notable healthy carrier of a deadly disease, Mary Mallon, is back – not in person, but as a hashtag: #TyphoidMary.

In the current pandemic, people may unknowingly harbour and spread the coronavirus before they feel sick, largely because it has an incubation period of between two and 14 days. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now says that one in four people could be asymptomatic carriers, never showing symptoms even as they infect others.

But there are also those who, knowing they could be carriers, refuse to cover their mouths or practice social distancing. They include the spring breakers who crowded Florida beaches and the protesters gathering in some state capitals.

Mary Mallon, known as Typhoid Mary, was until now the most prominent example in the US of the unknowing disease carrier. She spread typhoid fever to at least 53 people, causing three deaths between 1900 and 1915.

But Mallon has long been unfairly characterised as knowingly spreading the deadly disease she carried. Her memory has been resurrected recently, largely on Twitter, as a shorthand description of those who intentionally infect others with the coronavirus, #TyphoidMary.

As the author of Constructing the Outbreak: Epidemics in Media and Collective Memory, I can attest to the media’s past and continuing distortion of the Mary Mallon case. It’s unfair to Mallon to attach her name to such consciously bad behaviour.

Mary Mallon, the healthy carrier

Story from The Evening World, April 1, 1907, which used an alias for Mallon’s last name. Photo: Library of Congress

Contrary to popular belief, Mallon never perceived herself to be contagious. During her famous trial of 1909, newspapers quoted her saying, “I was cook for Mr. Stebbins’ family and other families, and nobody fell sick while I was there.”

Like many people in her era, Mallon could not fathom that a healthy-looking person could transmit disease. Throughout her life, she swore her innocence, claiming that she had never had the disease.

The popular – and mistaken – beliefs about Mallon came primarily from media accounts during her life. But the mischaracterisation of Mallon continued long after.

Mallon unknowingly spread typhoid fever through the dishes she prepared, mostly for wealthy families in New York. In the summer of 1906, she cooked for the Warren family at their rental house at Long Island’s Oyster Bay. From August 26 through September 3, typhoid fever struck six out of 11 members of the household.

The homeowners hired George Soper, a self-proclaimed “sanitary engineer,” to investigate. He eventually traced the Oyster Bay outbreak to the new cook, along with typhoid at six of her other places of employment.

Soper’s discovery prompted the New York City Health Inspector Dr. Josephine Baker and the police department to take Mallon by force to a nearby hospital.

Against her will, she underwent multiple physical examinations that included stool samples, which revealed the Salmonella typhi bacteria. Mallon was then quarantined at North Brother Island, a refuge for those ill with tuberculosis and other contagious diseases, for two years without a charge or trial.

Mallon hired attorney George O’Neill, who petitioned for her release on June 28, 1909. Before a judge, she testified that she was healthy and had never made others ill. The judge denied her request on the grounds that she was a threat to public health and ordered her to continue living isolated at North Brother Island.

Illustration from the New York American of Mary Mallon, known pejoratively as Typhoid Mary, breaking skulls into a frying pan. Photo: New York Public Library

Becoming ‘Typhoid Mary’

Approximately 400 other healthy carriers had also been identified in New York at the time of Mallon’s trial. Unlike Mallon, they were not arrested, tried and imprisoned for years.

It was Mallon’s status as a poor, Irish immigrant woman that made her susceptible to becoming the city’s scapegoat. Soper himself initially described her as “an Irish woman about 40 years of age, tall, heavy, single.” Newspapers treated Mallon as either a “germ receptacle” or as a wild animal to be contained. “Woman ‘Typhoid Factory’ Held As a Prisoner,” stated one headline. “Witch In N.Y.” read a Tacoma Times headline. The story included this description of Mallon: “Legendary witches of old used to build red fires…and brew deadly potions…But poor ‘Typhoid Mary’… requires no cauldron. She manufactures WITHIN HERSELF the evil potions which she spreads about.”

Facts about the case came from Soper and public health authorities to medical journals and newspapers, mentioning her ethnicity, appearance and marital status. Such characteristics were not identified in stories of other healthy carriers. Mallon was never interviewed and therefore did not get to give her perspective, other than in reprinted segments of a single letter to her attorney, in which she declared her innocence.

Government officials and the media justified Mallon’s loss of civil liberties by framing her as a particular danger to public health, more than other healthy carriers.

Her infamous nickname, coined at a 1908 medical conference and then repeated in an edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association, shifted Mallon’s public persona from human incubator to villain – an image introduced in the New York American newspaper on June 20, 1909.

The headline “‘Typhoid Mary’: The Extraordinary Predicament of Mary Mallon, a Prisoner on New York’s Quarantine Hospital Island,” extended over a full-page drawing of a cook sautéing a cluster of skulls in her cast-iron skillet. This introduction forever cemented the misconception that Mallon’s disease transmission was murderously intentional.

From that point, news stories compared “Typhoid Sally,” “Diphtheria Mildred” and other healthy carriers to “Typhoid Mary.” While some were briefly detained at hospitals after unintentionally causing outbreaks, no one was treated as poorly as Mallon.

Perpetuating ‘Typhoid Mary’

Mallon was finally released in 1910. With a lack of options (and without an understanding of healthy carriers), Mallon began cooking again, this time at restaurants, hotels and, lastly, the Sloane Hospital for Women. When more than 20 cases of typhoid erupted at the hospital, authorities identified Mallon as the source.

On March 26, 1915, the New York City Department of Public Health escorted Mallon back to North Brother Island. She lived and worked at the hospital there until she died in 1938. There is no record of typhoid outbreaks during her stay.

Even after her final detention and death, newspapers and popular culture perpetuated the misconception that Mallon infected people intentionally, channeling her natural poison (typhoid) through the food she cooked. Books like Terrible Typhoid Mary: A True Story of the Deadliest Cook in America, television references and the eponymous comic book character have preserved this image of a villainous Mallon.

Across media platforms, “Typhoid Mary” is still casually applied to contemporary menaces of public health, ignoring the ethically dubious practice of blaming healthy carriers and Mary Mallon’s persecution as a poor immigrant at the turn of the 20th century.

Katherine A. Foss, Professor of Media Studies, Middle Tennessee State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Consultations on Human Infection Studies in India: Do People’s Voices Really Count?

In order to effectively introduce the Controlled Human Infection Model in India, recommendations of previous consultations must be followed: public engagement, transparency, ethical and social concerns, and a regulatory framework.

The Indian health and scientific community has of late been considering pursuing research using a technique called the controlled human infection model, where healthy participants are infected with a weakened strain of a pathogen to study the infection and pick up on potential cures.

Since 2017, the Department of Biotechnology has helped organise three consultations. The latest was in March 2019. This article documents some of the ethical issues raised during these meetings.

The Controlled Human Infection Model or CHIM, sometimes described as a human challenge study, is a relatively specialised medical research technique. Researchers infect healthy participants with a weakened strain of a pathogen in a controlled setting, in order to learn more about the infection and the disease, or to develop new vaccines for that disease.

Unlike in other human clinical trials, where participants face a risk of harm because of, for example, the drug’s side effects, healthy participants in CHIM trials are deliberately harmed through infection – contrary to every principle and guideline of medical practice and research.

The practice of deliberate infection avowedly in the search for knowledge is not new. The best-known instance dates back to 1796, when the physician Edward Jenner infected a child with cowpox, collecting information that eventually led to the development of the smallpox vaccine.

There are some 155 CHIM studies across the world, of which the vast majority are being carried out in developed countries, most of these in the US, the UK, and the Netherlands with a few in Spain, Germany, Australia and Belgium. More recently, CHIM has been used in Mali, Kenya, Tanzania, Gabon, Colombia, Thailand and Equatorial Guinea.

The US clinical trials registry clinicaltrials.gov lists CHIM studies for malaria (76), influenza (30), respiratory syncytial virus (12), norovirus (9), shigella (6), typhoid (5), campylobacter (4), tuberculosis (4), hookworm (2), and cholera, common cold, dengue, e-coli, streptococcus pneumoniae, schistosomiasis, and celiac disease (1 each).

Today, CHIM seems to be largely used for the purpose of speeding up the development of vaccines. The current vaccine development paradigm, in which vaccine candidates are tested in real-life settings, takes a long time and a lot of money. As was stated at a recent consultation, CHIM could be a strategy to cut the time and costs to “bring the vaccine to market”.

CHIM studies have contributed to the development of a cholera vaccine licensed by the United States Food and Drugs Administration, a malaria vaccine licensed by the European Medicines Agency, and a typhoid vaccine pre-approved by the World Health Organisation, among other products.

A series of consultations

Since 2017, there has been talk of introducing CHIM studies in India. Three consultations, bringing together scientists, public health specialists, lawyers and ethicists to deliberate on the science and ethics of CHIM studies, have taken place. The meetings have been supported by the Translational Health Sciences and Technology Institute (THSTI), an autonomous institute of the division of the Indian government’s department of biotechnology (DBT). The latest of these meetings was held in March 2019.

At the first meeting in Vellore in October 2017, on the possible introduction of human challenge trials in India, participants asked for transparency in the decision-making process, with consultations with stakeholders, extensive public engagement, and taking the public into confidence, before such studies are conducted here.

The January 2018 consultation in Mumbai included biomedical scientists, social scientists, medical professionals, industry representatives, media, lawyers, nongovernmental organisations, and those working on ethics. At this consultation, researchers from Kenya spoke on their experiences with CHIM for a malaria vaccine. A presentation was also made on whether CHIM could be used for Zika virus research. This was followed by small group discussions on CHIM from the perspectives of basic science, industry, ethics, regulation, social science and the media. The group presentations indicated that views were divided as to the value of this research method.

While some felt CHIM was essential for developing new life-saving technologies, others had reservations on the focus on new vaccines as a public health intervention at the cost of other public health measures, and without, for example, addressing the problem of low coverage of existing vaccines.

Also read: India Leads in Vaccine Production but Not in Vaccination

Some participants also pointed to the lack of clarity on issues such as whether it was possible to take consent to be harmed, and whether the regulatory structure in India would ensure proper review and monitoring to protect vulnerable participants. The media group flagged the history of unethical research in India. The minutes of this meeting have not been made public.

A collection of papers developed after this consultation was published in the October-December 2018 issue of the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics.

In December 2018, researchers from St John’s Research Institute’s department of Health and Humanities, at a meeting ahead of the World Congress on Bioethics in Bengaluru, reported on a THSTI-funded study of people’s perceptions of CHIM. Researchers organised focus group discussions with a cross-section of people on whether they would be willing to be infected with a disease of some kind, as part of research. While the responses were varied, many expressed strong misgivings about participating in this type of trial. The study report was not available, but the meeting participants were informed that it would soon be submitted for publication.

The latest meeting was held in Bengaluru on March 6, 2019, organised by the St John’s Research Institute’s department of health and humanities with funding from THISTI. The approximately 30 participants came from departments of infectious disease, microbiology, clinical research, community health, public health, medicine, health and humanities, law, media, and ethics, from public and private institutions, and nongovernmental organisations, in Bengaluru, Chennai, Gurugram, Hyderabad, Mangaluru, Mumbai, Thiruvananthapuram and Vellore.

Meeting to consider specific CHIM scenarios

The meeting started with an introduction on CHIM – what it consists of, when it is used, and what is needed to conduct biomedical research using the human challenge model. One of the uses of CHIM is to evaluate potential vaccine candidates and “fast-track vaccine development”.

The presenter stated that the ideal controlled human infection model would be one for a disease of public health importance, for which no animal model is available, which can be treated, and for which various steps – including the use of specialised high-tech facilities – can be taken to ensure that there is no harm to the participant or the community. Finally, CHIM would require “appropriate ethical guidelines and national guidelines to ensure participant safety”, “well trained researchers”, “trained ethics committees”, “public engagement and support”, and “well informed volunteers”.

The introduction also touched on ethical concerns such as how volunteers would be recruited, how their consent could be taken, how they could be compensated for their time without inducing them to join the trial, and what level of risk would be acceptable in CHIM.

Also read: Why Are Children Still Dying of Vaccine-Preventable Diphtheria?

Ethical arguments were also presented in favour of CHIM, particularly in developing countries. Traditional vaccine research exposes people to ineffective vaccines, increases research costs and delays vaccine development, leaving people without vaccine coverage, or with ineffective vaccines.

Second, most CHIM studies so far have been conducted in rich countries for diseases that concerned people in poor countries. It was said more than once: “These countries took risks for us… we should find solutions to our own problems.”

Three scenarios, several concerns

The next speaker presented three detailed scenarios in which CHIM might be considered in India – to test vaccines for typhoid, malaria and chikungunya – after which groups were asked to spend about an hour deliberating on the information gaps in the scenario, the feasibility of the research, and ethical issues.

A few concerns stood out in group presentations and the discussions that followed.

First, questions were raised about the choice of diseases. Though the introductory presenter stated that the ideal CHIM would be one in which no animal model was available, it was clear that animal models have been used for all three diseases. At the same time, the specialist presenter acknowledged that there was no point in this particular group discussing a CHIM for chikungunya, as it has no treatment. One person also pointed out that malaria is so extensively researched that a human challenge study is not likely to produce substantial and critical information, other than to test a new vaccine.

Additional questions came up in the case of typhoid, for which there is already a vaccine. A participant argued that if the current vaccine was used widely enough, it would be sufficient to create herd immunity to typhoid despite its limited efficacy. Hence, there was no need for a new typhoid vaccine using CHIM. Separately, someone asked if the new vaccine would be tested against a placebo when a vaccine already existed.* Such testing would seem to violate national and international ethical guidelines that restrict the use of a placebo in research when an effective intervention exists

At this meeting, too, opinions were divided on the use of CHIM in India – whether it was needed, whether the necessary regulatory structure was in place, and whether it could be conducted ethically. A number of participants expressed their reservations, but others viewed human challenge trials as both essential and inevitable in India.

Are human challenge trials in India a done deal?

Participants were informed at the start of the meeting that there were at present no confirmed plans to undertake human challenge studies in India. However, it is possible that CHIM trials will be introduced in India, possibly by the end of 2019.

In July 2018, the DBT-European Union sent out a call for proposals for collaborative research for an influenza vaccine using CHIM, with an April 2019 deadline and a decision by August 2019. A researcher from THSTI has put in a proposal for this, though a THSTI representative stated at the meeting that influenza is not the best choice for CHIM research. Apparently, researchers’ assurances that CHIM would be used only when essential should be taken with a pinch of salt.

If DBT’s first CHIM trial will be on influenza, it is not clear why participants at the March meeting were asked to discuss typhoid, malaria and chikungunya, diseases with a completely different mode of transmission.

The DBT-EU call does not specify that the human challenge studies must be done in India, and it has been suggested that the THSTI proposal may have been submitted with the understanding that the CHIM trials could be done outside India. However, other steps seem to suggest that moves are being made to start such trials in India as soon as clearance is given.

For one, in November 2018, members of THSTI and of the Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore visited the Oxford Vaccine Group’s laboratory in the United Kingdom to learn about the facilities needed for conducting CHIM trials in India. The Oxford centre has carried out many CHIM trials, including one of a typhoid vaccine developed by CMC along with Bharat Biotech and with support from the Wellcome Trust and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Also read: Pfizer Gets Pneumonia Vaccine Patent, Months After Inclusion in India’s Universal Immunisation Plan

Second, CMC is apparently working on building capacity to do “first in human trials” including upgrading facilities for waste treatment and containment. These facilities would also be needed for CHIM trials, “So that if and when they are allowed, they are prepared,” a participant mentioned in a post-workshop conversation.

And finally, a proposal for typhoid research using CHIM is also being developed.

These are just some indications of organisations making preparations to use CHIM in India.

It seems that this controversial trial method is being introduced in India without proper stakeholder consultation, public engagement, transparency and accountability. So, we feel the need to flag some major concerns regarding the introduction of human challenge trials in India.

Who will regulate and how?

It is not clear how CHIM studies can be conducted legally in India as there is no regulatory framework in place for research that involves intentionally harming participants. The Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, regulates drug trials towards the development and marketing approval of new drugs. It does not mention the use of biological agents for non-therapeutic purposes.

The draft consent forms in the Rules do not mention consent for intentional harm. CHIM would also be contrary to the principles laid down in the Indian Good Clinical Practices for biomedical studies, and the Indian Council for Medical Research’s guidelines on biomedical and health research involving human beings, which emphasise that in research on human beings, the interest of science should never take precedence over considerations related to the wellbeing of participants.

The government could soon publish a list of essential diagnostic tests along the lines of the National List of Essential Medicines. Credit: pixabay

Representative image. Credit: Pixabay Commons

However, THSTI apparently feels that the current regulatory framework is sufficient. “There is risk in so many medical procedures and in research too,” said a THSTI representative. “Organ donation carries a risk but we don’t need a separate law to do organ transplant.” This is an inappropriate comparison in many ways. Organ donation has a direct benefit to the recipient; it is framed as a completely altruistic act, and the donor may not claim compensation of any kind. And there is in fact a separate law regulating organ and tissue transplants.

Incidentally, it was learned at the meeting that CHIM could be used to take a vaccine directly for marketing approval, bypassing phase 3 trials, raising other ethical and regulatory questions. Is it possible that CHIM studies would allow researchers to skip animal studies altogether?

Some lessons of human challenge studies elsewhere

Even a very scrappy review of information on CHIM studies flags major concerns. First, there are reports of volunteers in both developed and developing countries joining a CHIM trial for financial compensation or for access to healthcare.

Second, though human challenge studies are supposed to use an attenuated or weakened pathogen, with close monitoring and prompt treatment as soon as infection is detected, ensuring that participants do not experience serious harm, the reality can be somewhat different. There are reports of volunteers experiencing substantial harm in these experiments. For example, some volunteers in a study of schistosomiasis experienced months of severe headache and body pain.

This was in the Netherlands which one imagines should have the best of systems to protect volunteers. Volunteers in influenza CHIM studies have recorded heart damage, and in human challenge studies of shigella and e-coli infections have reported instances of long-term adverse effects such as reactive arthritis and post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome.

In a general discussion, at the Bengaluru meeting, on a volunteer in Oxford reporting severe symptoms of typhoid, one of the meeting participants commented that the volunteer had taken part in multiple human challenge trials. This is a matter for concern. The reason for a volunteer to enrol in multiple trials is likely to be the compensation offered, and it is worrisome that researchers seem to have ignored such multiple participation. The suggestion that there is a link between multiple CHIM participation and severity of symptoms also implies that participating in a CHIM trial increases one’s risk of a heightened reaction to any consequent infection.

Also read: The Right to Know, or Not Know, the Data From Medical Research

On a related note, a member of CMC’s ethics committee who visited the Oxford centre noticed on reviewing some documents that as much as 1,000 ml of blood had been collected from each participant in a CHIM study. Blood donors are not allowed to donate more than 350 ml of blood following which they may not donate again for three months. This fact was not reflected in the study publication. The EC member mentioned this to illustrate that published reports may be incomplete. Such grave misgivings regarding human challenge studies go unreported and are thus not found in published papers, a major cause for concern.

Though CHIM has been around for decades, there is no uniform reporting of serious injuries in CHIM across the world, let alone a central registry of all such injuries. Though few adverse events may have been reported, “The absence of standardised reporting of adverse events…hampers the meta-analysis of available safety data”. This means we do not even really know how many serious injuries have taken place in human challenge trials across the world.

The vaccine paradigm and its problems

Vaccine development seems to be the most common reason to conduct a human challenge study. But the focus on vaccines as the primary public health tool needs to be subjected to greater scrutiny. Vaccines are one of many health interventions which must be weighed along with other interventions such as clean drinking water, sanitation, vector control, nutrition, etc, which have multiple benefits – and are also the community’s right, and the duty of the state to provide.

One of the participants at the March meeting pointed out that decisions on the need for a vaccine require subject specialists, epidemiologists, health system experts, civil society organisations, and the people, the communities themselves. Such discussions have not been part of the framework of these consultations.

Lip service to consultations?

The message is clear: despite observing the niceties of discussions and community surveys, there is every sign that the government plans to ramp up vaccine research in India using human challenge studies, with the support of funding organisations and as part of an international collaborative effort. The meetings since November 2017 may have served only to gauge the public’s views on CHIM and give the impression of genuine consultation.

The government of India seems to be committed to human challenge studies and THSTI, one of its autonomous institutions, is focused on undertaking such studies despite its assurances that they would be considered only after specific requirements were met.

There must be a scientific consensus, on the basis of scientific data, that the research question at hand is critically important, and CHIM is essential to answer that research question. And the recommendations of previous consultations must be followed: systematic public engagement, taking the public into confidence, transparency at every stage, addressing ethical and social concerns, and a clear regulatory framework specific to CHIM. The government needs to be open, transparent, and most importantly ethical in its dealings about CHIM trials.

Many participants at these meetings have cautioned that, for a variety of reasons, CHIM trials should not be conducted in India. The health infrastructural facilities are poor, potential trial participants are vulnerable, and the regulatory and ethical framework is substandard and will not protect participants subjected to this particularly problematic research method. A participant at the March meeting stated that even if CHIM were a good method, the current climate is not a good one to use this technique.

Such cautions and caveats may not be heeded in the transnational race for undertaking human challenge studies for new vaccines.

This article was first published in the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics. Read the original here.