Similarities and Differences Between Clinical Trials of Drugs and Clinical Trials of Vaccines
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56450/JEFI.2025.v3i04.003Keywords:
Clinical trials, Drug development, Vaccine development, Regulatory framework, Public health, IndiaAbstract
Background: Clinical trials are central to the development of drugs and vaccines; however, therapeutic, and preventive products differ substantially in objectives, populations, endpoints, and regulatory expectations. Aim & Objectives: To critically compare similarities and differences between drug and vaccine clinical trials, with special reference to the Indian regulatory and public health framework. Methodology: A structured narrative review was conducted using PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, WHO IRIS, CDSCO, ICMR, FDA, and EMA sources (2000–2025). Seventy-three eligible publications were included after screening 480 records. Comparative domains included trial phases, endpoints, safety monitoring, ethics, regulatory scrutiny, and post-marketing systems. Results: Both trial types follow phased development, Good Clinical Practice, ethics oversight, and regulatory approval pathways. However, vaccine trials differ in enrolling predominantly healthy populations, emphasizing immunogenicity and population-level effectiveness, requiring larger sample sizes, stricter safety thresholds, and enhanced community engagement. In India, NDCTR-2019, CTRI registration, PvPI, and AEFI frameworks create differentiated yet complementary surveillance mechanisms. Conclusion: While drug and vaccine trials share methodological foundations, vaccines operate within a broader public health governance paradigm. Strengthening integrated surveillance, adaptive regulatory pathways, and ethical harmonization is essential for future therapeutic and preventive innovation.
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