Limited evidence from the current COVID-19 vaccine efficacy trials — as well as data emerging as vaccines roll out in the community — suggest but do not prove that the current COVID-19 vaccines do reduce infection, including asymptomatic infection. The newly launched college study is designed to find out for sure.
Answers from this new trial will likely signal whether the much-anticipated vaccines will usher in a return to life where people can safely congregate in crowded, indoor settings without fear, or if the era of masks and social distancing is likely to be with us for a long, long time.
Results of the trial should be ready in time for students attending college this fall.
Although only the Moderna vaccine will be used in the college trials, Corey said the results will apply equally well to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which uses a similar technology (called mRNA) to train the body’s immune system to recognize and attack SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
“Whatever one learns from Moderna applies to Pfizer,” he said. “The strand of RNA is identical.”
There will be no placebo injections given in this trial. Half of the students (aged 18-26) will be randomly selected to receive the Moderna vaccine on the day they enroll, and the remaining 6,000 will get their first shot four months later.
12,000 students, 1.3 million nasal swabs
Those nasal swabs — more than 1.3 million of them — will be stored by the participants and shipped off weekly to a laboratory for the same kind of PCR testing performed by public health clinics to determine if someone is infected with SARS-CoV-2. All 12,000 participants will be prompted to fill out weekly electronic diary checking for symptoms of illness and reminding them to complete their daily swab tests.
During this time, these same participating students will also receive twice weekly real-time COVID-19 tests from their college health clinics so that, if a person becomes positive for the virus, he or she can quickly be isolated and receive appropriate treatment.
Any positive samples found among the daily swabs will be more deeply analyzed to determine how much virus was in them — a measure called viral load. Any viruses detected can also be genetically sequenced to determine which variant of SARS-CoV-2 had infected the individual.
Daily testing is key to giving researchers a better handle on the stealthy nature of SARS-CoV-2. Studies suggest that a person appears to be most infectious for only a few days, and those days are often before the onset — if ever — of any COVID-19 symptoms. Roughly half of SARS-CoV-2 infections remain asymptomatic.