First human trial of Oxford Covid-19 vaccine shows promise

Blood samples from coronavirus vaccine trials are handled inside the Jenner Institute in Oxford, England. Picture: John Cairns, University of Oxford via AP

Blood samples from coronavirus vaccine trials are handled inside the Jenner Institute in Oxford, England. Picture: John Cairns, University of Oxford via AP

Published Jul 20, 2020

Share

London - An experimental coronavirus

vaccine being developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford university was

safe and produced an immune response in early-stage clinical

trials, data showed on Monday, keeping alive the hope it could

be in use by the end of the year.

The vaccine, called AZD1222, has been described by the World

Health Organization's chief scientist as the leading candidate

in a global race to halt a pandemic that has claimed more than

600,000 lives.

More than 150 possible vaccines are in various stages of

development with U.S. drugmaker Pfizer and China's CanSino

Biologics also reporting positive responses for their candidates

on Monday.

The vaccine from AstraZeneca and Britain's

University of Oxford did not prompt any serious side effects and

elicited antibody and T-cell immune responses, according to

trial results published in The Lancet medical journal, with the

strongest response seen in people who received two doses.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose government has helped

to fund the project, hailed the results as "very positive news."

However, the researchers cautioned the project was still at

an early stage.

"There is still much work to be done before we can confirm

if our vaccine will help manage the Covid-19 pandemic," vaccine

developer Sarah Gilbert said.

"We still do not know how strong an immune response we need

to provoke to effectively protect against SARS-CoV-2 infection,"

she said, adding researchers needed to learn more about Covid-19

and continue late stage trials which have already commenced.

AstraZeneca shares surged 10%, but then gave up most of

those gains, to trade 1.2% stronger on the day.

AstraZeneca has signed agreements with governments around

the world to supply the vaccine should it prove effective and

gain regulatory approval. The company has said it will not seek

to profit from the vaccine during the pandemic.

Adrian Hill, the director of Oxford university's Jenner

Institute, said early projections that a million doses of the

vaccine could be made by September could be an under-estimate,

depending on how quickly late-stage trials can be completed.

He added it remained possible that the vaccine could be in

use by the end of the year.

Researchers said the vaccine caused minor side effects more

frequently than a control group, but some of these could be

reduced by taking paracetamol.

AZD1222 was developed by Oxford university and licensed to

AstraZeneca, which has put it into large-scale, late-stage

trials to test its efficacy. It has also already signed deals to

produce and supply over 2 billion doses of the shot.

The new trial included 1,077 healthy adults aged 18-55 years

with no history of Covid-19.

Reuters

Related Topics:

coronavirus