23/04/20

COVID-19 trials at risk after Africa ‘racism’ backlash

临床试验
The African community in France is urging relatives to refuse to take part in clinical trials, following ‘racist’ comments by French researchers. Copyright:IITA图像库[CC BY-NC-SA 2.0]

Speed read

  • Africans say they will not take part in COVID-19 clinical trials following ‘racist’ comments from French researchers
  • 评论表明非洲应该“由于缺乏保护”来测试地面
  • Scientists fear clinical research will now be compromised, delayed

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African communities in France are warning relatives in Africa to refuse to take part in trials forCOVID-19治疗或疫苗,促使人们担心临床研究的成功。

High-profile African figures, including footballers Samuel Eto'o and Didier Drogba, have voiced their opposition to medical trials, which many perceive are using Africans as 'guinea pigs'.

Comments from French researchers Camille Locht and Jean-Paul Mira prompted the outcry, after they discussed conducting medical trials in Africa in a live news broadcast. The exchange portrayed the public health situation in Africa as an opportunity to conduct BCG trials, because of the high level of exposure and size of the sample.

BCG is Bacillus Calmette-Guérin, a vaccine used against tuberculosis. It appears to produce a non-specific immunity that protects against lung infections, especially in infants, making it of interest for novel coronavirus.

“我们有数据that show that when we revaccinate adult subjects, they can also be protected against viral respiratory infections, and this is the approach that is advocated in relation to this revaccination trial,” says Odile Launay, professor of medicine, infectious disease specialist, and coordinator of the Cochin-Pasteur National Clinical Research Network in Vaccinology.

The trial will consider whether BCG can confer immunity against the respiratory complications associated with COVID-19. Several countries, including France, have urgently launched a range of clinical trials to develop therapeutic solutions effective against SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

“This is about the trust between our peoples and the future prospects of North-South assistance, on a collaborative basis of course, that could suffer, or even come to an end because of this blunder.”

Christian Hervé, professor of medicine and president, International Academy of Medical Ethics and Public Health

Ayola Akim Adegnika, a specialist in immunology and parasitology based at the University of Tübingen in Germany and the Centre for Medical Research (CERMEL) in Gabon, says that the scientific community hopes the comments will not hinder much-needed clinical research.

临床试验需要包括各种地理位置,祖先,年龄和风险组,以确保将广泛治疗successful when rolled out.

Adegnika说:“这是一种向我们展示了我们彼此依赖的全球阶段,我们需要共同努力来对抗它。”

他说,参加临床试验的社区不应感到被剥削或不尊重。

Ethical considerations

“我们需要考虑从一个道德教谕ive is that what is at stake goes well beyond the unfortunate statement made by an individual who has since expressed regret for it,” says Christian Hervé, professor of medicine and president of the International Academy of Medical Ethics and Public Health.

“This is about the trust between our peoples and the future prospects of North-South assistance, on a collaborative basis of course, that could suffer, or even come to an end because of this blunder.”

The exchange, between Mira, head of the intensive care unit at the Hôpital Cochin in Paris, and Locht, director of research at France's National Institute of Health and Scientific Research (Inserm), aired on the French news channel LCI on 1 April.

Mira asked: “If I can allow myself to be provocative, should we not carry out this study in Africa, where there are no masks, no treatment, no intensive care, a bit like what has incidentally been done in a number of studies on AIDS, or looking at prostitutes? We try things because we know they are high-risk and they don't use protection…What do you think?”

Locht agreed and indicated a project along such lines was already in development.

Anger and apologies

The comments resulted in an outcry and protests among African communities. Prominent scientists added their voices to the wave of indignation, in spite of the relevance of such trials in managing the COVID-19 pandemic.

Heated views, ranging from the calling out of racist discourses to conspiracy theories about the depopulation of Africa, were shared on social media and messaging apps. Petitions were addressed to the World Health Organization and the United Nations Children's Fund, UNICEF.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus condemned what he said were “racist comments” indicative of a “colonial mindset”. Africa, he added, should not be confined to the role of 'a testing ground' for a vaccine.

In France, the non-profit SOS Racisme indicated it was considering legal action, while the Moroccan Lawyers' Club has reportedly filed a legal complaint for what it describes as racial defamation.

Inserm在一份声明中说:“了解人们为什么不高兴,他没有挑战他在LCI上现场直播的计划中与之交谈的人提出的观点。面试发生的条件不允许他以适当的方式做出反应。他为此道歉,并渴望强调他没有说什么种族主义者。”

The directorate of the Paris Hospitals Trust issued a response that included an apology from Mira: “To all those who have been hurt, shocked, or felt insulted by my clumsy choice of words on LCI this week, I would like to offer my most sincere apologies, because those words are in no way a reflection of who I am, nor of what I have been doing on a daily basis, for over 30 years.”

This piece was produced by SciDev.Net’s Sub-Saharan Africa French edition and edited for clarity.