Feature

In Ghana, SCD research is meeting patients on home turf


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM FSCDR 2018


“We created a research team and built capacity for future work…. Ghana, and Africa, are capable of conducting clinical trials to global standards and producing quality data,” she said.

The story of one clinical trial is illustrative of the challenges and strengths of the multinational approach.

The phase 1b trial of a novel treatment for sickle cell disease, NVX-508, began with an initial hurdle of lack of access to emergency care at the study site, said Dr. Owusu-Ansah, a study investigator. Her first reaction, she said, was, “Well, we can’t do this, because we don’t have access to a big staff and emergency facilities.”

But after consulting with colleagues, she realized a shift in mindset was needed: “Rather than focus on what we don’t have, what do we actually have available? We have relationships we have built with institutions,” including the oldest SCD clinic in Ghana, the Ghana Institute of Clinical Genetics (GICG). This facility sits next door to a hospital with 24-hour care, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH), a major tertiary care and referral center.

Open since 1974, the KBTH-allied GICG provides comprehensive outpatient health care to teens and adult with SCD. Currently, more than 25,000 SCD patients are registered at GICG; about half have the HbSS genotype, and another 40% have the HbSC genotype, said Yvonne Dei-Adomakoh, MD. Dr. Dei-Adomakoh of the University of Ghana is an investigator for an upcoming phase 3 trial to test voxelotor against placebo in SCD.

The GICG is working hard to become a site where clinical trials, as well as research and development, are embedded into clinic functions. In this way, not only will research be advanced for all those with SCD, but advances will be more easily incorporated into clinical care, said Dr. Dei-Adomakoh.

Dr. Owusu-Ansah noted that the facility offers a pharmacy, a laboratory, exam rooms, and information technology and medical record resources. Importantly, GICG is already staffed with physicians and allied health personnel with SCD expertise.

The University of Ghana campus is home to one of Africa’s leading biomedical research facilities, a sophisticated 11,000-square-foot laboratory that can perform testing ranging from polymerase chain reactions to DNA sequencing to genotyping and flow cytometry; it also houses a laboratory animal facility. This laboratory, the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, also offers administrative, scientific, and research support, and houses an institutional review board.

The problem of the Noguchi laboratory site’s distance from the 24-hour support of KBTH has been solved by arranging to have an ambulance with paramedics available on site during the clinical trials.

Some other challenges the investigators discovered highlighted less-obvious infrastructure deficits; keeping a refrigerated chain of custody for biological samples, for example, can be difficult. In preparation for the trials, much basic laboratory and clinical equipment has been updated.

Conducting a U.S.-registered clinical trial in Ghana doesn’t obviate the need to meet that country’s considerable regulatory hurdles, said Dr. Owusu-Ansah. Requirements include a full regulatory submission to, and physical inspection by, Ghana’s FDA. Ghana also requires that the principal investigator must live in Ghana for the duration of the trial and that key study personnel complete Ghanaian good clinical practices training, she said.

The University of Pittsburgh is a U.S. partner in the NVX-508 study, and it was non-negotiable for that institution that a clinical trial monitor visit the African study sites. The institution’s institutional review board was sensitive to the importance of protecting vulnerable populations, and needed to hear complete plans for risk assessment, data protection, and compensation for Ghanaian study participants, Dr. Owusu-Ansah said.

But, in a turn of events typical of the ups and downs of drug development, the phase 1 trial had passed most of the administrative hurdles when in July the drug’s sponsor, NuvOx Pharma, suspended the NVX-508 trial to focus on other areas. For now, the trial registration has been withdrawn on clinicaltrials.gov and the new drug application is inactive. But Dr. Owusu-Ansah said study preparations could resume in the future, if the drug is made available to investigators.

Dr. Owusu-Ansah reported that she has received salary support from NuvOx Pharma. Dr. Segbefia reported that she has received support from Daiichi-Sankyo and Eli Lilly and Company.

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