Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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IMV receives funding for trials of its Covid-19 vaccine candidate – Clinical Trials Arena

August 7, 2020

]]> DPX-Covid-19 is a slightly different vaccine approach compared to traditional approach. Credit: Jernej Furman.

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Clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company IMV has announced that the government agencies of Canada will invest up to C$4.75m ($3.58m) in IMVs Covid-19 vaccine candidate DPX-Covid-19.

IMV will receive C$4.15m ($3.12m) as part of the Canadian National Research Council of Canada Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC IRAP), as well as from the Canada Opportunities Agency and Next Generation Manufacturing Canada.

Furthermore, IMV has received C$600,000 ($452,014) from the NRC IRAPs innovative assistance programme.

IMV plans to use funds generated from the financing to support the scaling up of DPX-Covid-19 manufacturing and a Phase I study of DPX-Covid-19 in Canada.

DPX-Covid-19 is a slightly different vaccine approach compared to the traditional methods.

It combines the traditional vaccine approach with immunotherapy to generate a targeted immune response (IR) against the virus.

IMV CEO Frederic Ors commented: Governmental organisations play a pivotal role in the fight against Covid-19.

Their contribution allows IMV to leverage our innovative DPX platform for the rapid development of a vaccine to protect against the coronavirus.

Vaccination is our best hope for ending the current pandemic. Based on our preclinical results and rapid development, we believe that both our vaccine and manufacturing approaches have the potential to be transformational for Covid-19, and we appreciate the governments support and confidence in our progress.

In November 2018, IMV revised its Phase Ib/II clinical trial investigating the safety and efficacy of DPX-Survivac in combination with epacadostat for the treatment of patients with recurrent ovarian cancer.

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IMV receives funding for trials of its Covid-19 vaccine candidate - Clinical Trials Arena

Covid-19 Vaccine Trials Have a Problem: Minority Groups Dont Trust Them – The Wall Street Journal

August 6, 2020

Researchers and companies developing Covid-19 vaccines are taking new steps to tackle a longtime challenge: Those who need the vaccines most urgently, including Black and Latino people, are least likely to participate in clinical trials to determine whether they work safely.

Racial and ethnic minority groups are more likely to be hospitalized and die from the new coronavirus, partly due to socioeconomic factors and underlying health conditions, data show. But clinical trials to evaluate drugs and vaccines historically underrepresent...

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Covid-19 Vaccine Trials Have a Problem: Minority Groups Dont Trust Them - The Wall Street Journal

Fauci: Drugmakers will have 1 billion COVID-19 vaccines by end of 2021 – Business Insider – Business Insider

August 6, 2020

Drugmakers will likely have produced a billion doses of a COVID-19 vaccine by the end of next year, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the United States' top infectious disease official, said Wednesday.

"We are likely going to have maybe tens of million of doses in the early part of [next] year. But as we get into 2021, the manufacturers tell us that they will have hundreds of millions and likely a billion doses by the end of 2021," Fauci said in an interview with Reuters.

That, of course, depends on an effective vaccine actually being developed and approved. "I'm cautiously optimistic, though you can never guarantee things with a vaccine," Fauci commented.

Before then, however, there will be another cycle of infection.

"I hope and feel it's possible that by the time we get through 2021 and go around for another cycle, that we'll have this under control," Fauci said. "Do I think we're going to have a much, much better control one full year from this winter? I think so."

Have a news tip? Email this reporter: cdavis@insider.com

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Fauci: Drugmakers will have 1 billion COVID-19 vaccines by end of 2021 - Business Insider - Business Insider

We cant skip steps on the road to a COVID-19 vaccine – The Verge

August 6, 2020

The pharmaceutical company Moderna started the last, longest step in the process of testing its COVID-19 vaccine candidate at the end of July a Phase 3 clinical trial. Its an enormous undertaking: their goal is to recruit 30,000 people, inject some of them with an experimental vaccine and then follow each and every one of them to see how many contract the coronavirus and how many do not. This will take months, even with the federal governments Operation Warp Speed compressing the timeline whenever possible. Those months may seem endless when over a thousand people are dying from COVID-19 each day in the United States.

The process is long and intensive for a reason, though. Just because a vaccine exists doesnt mean its reasonable or ethical to just give it to people before theres proof it works, and sticking to the process is why the vaccines on the market today are so safe.

Its just fundamentally wrong to think that because theres an emergency, that we should somehow throw out aspects of scientific research, says Alex John London, director of the Center for Ethics and Policy at Carnegie Mellon University.

Researchers already know a lot about a few of the vaccine candidates. Modernas vaccine, for example, has gone through both Phase 1 and Phase 2 clinical trials, and it has been tested in monkeys. The trials didnt raise any major red flags, and they showed that people injected with the vaccine produced antibodies against the coronavirus. But none of them were trying to answer the question people want to know the answer to: can this vaccine stop people from getting COVID-19 in the real world?

To answer that question, researchers turn to a Phase 3 trial. Theyll dose thousands of people with the vaccine candidate, and thousands more with a placebo vaccine. Then, theyll see if fewer people in the vaccine group get COVID-19 than in the placebo group. Theyre also watching for any side effects.

The amount of data we have on COVID-19 vaccines right now is only a fraction of what scientists need before theyd recommend something get widely distributed. The evidence that would convince me to get a COVID-19 vaccine, or to recommend that my loved ones get vaccinated, does not yet exist, Natalie Dean, an assistant professor of biostatistics at the University of Florida, wrote in a New York Times op-ed.

If a vaccine is a car, the Phase 1 and Phase 2 trials happen while its still in the factory. In those trials, scientists are still trying to assemble a vaccine that might work theyre figuring out the pieces that they might need and how they should be used. If that assembly process goes well, the vaccine candidate can move into Phase 3, where its taken for a heavily monitored ride in test tracks and the real world. Phase 1 and 2 lets you say, we have a lot of things we need to clarify and decide on, London says. Phase 3 says, great, now lets test that.

Those real-world tests are often unsuccessful. Only a small percentage of pharmaceutical products even those that look promising in early-stage trials make it through Phase 3 and end up getting approved for use. The success rate is higher in vaccines than treatments, but many of the vaccine successes are for viruses that scientists already know a lot about. New viruses, like the new coronavirus, are much harder to develop vaccines for and have a lower likelihood of success.

Sticking with the car metaphor, once a vaccine hits the test track, theres a chance itll stop running (not actually protect people from COVID-19) or, in the worst-case scenario, crash (have some serious side effects). Its first test drives have to be carefully watched, so that the people designing it can monitor exactly whats happening.

If, as the Phase 3 trials roll on, scientists start to see clear signs that it is working, theyd stop the trial early and start working to get it approved by the Food and Drug Administration. If whatever it is were testing is really showing that its working, scientists would be remiss to continue to test it in people, says Karen Maschke, who studies human research ethics at the Hastings Center in New York. But thats a rare exception to the rule. In almost all cases, you should carry a trial through to the end, she says.

Its particularly important to take vaccines all the way through the process because theyre intended for people who are already healthy. If someone is already sick, the benefits of trying a treatment out (even if its unclear how well it actually works) might be worth the potential risks. Its much harder ethically to justify something thats still experimental for a healthy person. A vaccine is the sort of thing that were going to administer to hundreds of millions of healthy people, or perhaps even this vaccine could even be given to a billion people, London says. We need to know that its safe.

Even if it doesnt come with side effects, giving people an experimental vaccine outside of a clinical trial and before researchers know if it actually works is risky. People who get an unproven vaccine may feel safer and stop taking as many precautions (like wearing masks or avoiding indoor gatherings) against COVID-19, London says. That could increase the spread of the disease if the vaccine doesnt work. We need to know if it works because people are going to change their behavior after they get it, London says.

Releasing a vaccine to the public before its proven to be safe and effective could also erode public trust in vaccines. With concerns about science, and anti-science sentiment, you have to be really, really careful that you get enough data, Maschke says. Researchers need to be able to point to the number of people they tested the vaccine in and their statistical analysis as justification for a recommendation. Trust in the process of developing new drugs and new medicines is fragile, London says. We cant put it in jeopardy.

There isnt usually such focused attention on the clinical trial process, London says. The public has a window into a discussion that theyre not usually a part of, he says. That process can be confusing, even at the best of times. Press releases, sound bites, and jargon can create the illusion that scientists know more about vaccine candidates than they do, or that they look more promising than they actually are. For example, when experts say that a vaccine performed well in a Phase 1 trial, they mean that they didnt see anything that would keep it from moving on to the next stage of the process.

It doesnt mean the things the public is interested in is it safe; if I take this, does it mean I wont have any adverse events a year later; and is it going to protect me if Im exposed to the coronavirus, he says.

Answering those questions is possible, but it will take time. Going at warp speed can save some time, but solid, conclusive answers are worth the wait.

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We cant skip steps on the road to a COVID-19 vaccine - The Verge

Chinese and Russian Hackers Targeting COVID-19 Vaccine Research – JD Supra

August 6, 2020

The latest development in the Department of Justices China Initiative occurred earlier this month, as the DOJ unsealed an 11-count indictment charging two Chinese nationals with stealing hundreds of millions of dollars worth of trade secrets, intellectual property, and other valuable business information including potential COVID-19 research. The two Chinese hackers allegedly worked for their own benefit and together with the Ministry of State Security, Chinas intelligence and security agency, to infiltrate the electronic networks of a number of targets including several American biotech firms publicly known for work on COVID-19 vaccines, treatments, and testing technology.

The DOJs indictment alleges a lengthy and wide-ranging scheme that lasted over a decade and targeted companies in a number of countries, including the United States, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, Netherlands, Spain, and Australia. Though media reports analyzing the indictment have focused on the COVID-19 research referenced therein, in fact the indictment is much broader. Targeted industries included, among others, high tech manufacturing; medical device, civil, and industrial engineering; business, educational, and gaming software; solar energy; pharmaceuticals; [and] defense. The trade secrets allegedly stolen by the Chinese hackers included intellectual property from at least eight known victims, which consisted of source code, technology designs, manufacturing processes, test mechanisms and results, and pharmaceutical chemical structures. In recent months, the two Chinese hackers allegedly searched for vulnerabilities and conducted reconnaissance on the electronic networks of American companies known publicly to be working on COVID-19 vaccines and antiviral drugs.

The COVID-19 research theft allegations follow recent claims from several Western intelligence agencies, including the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada, that hackers linked to the Russian government attacked academic and pharmaceutical research institutions involved in COVID-19 vaccine development.

Like the four Chinese nationals who allegedly hacked into the computer network of Equifax covered here, the two charged hackers in this case will likely never be prosecuted in the U.S.unless they travel outside of China. However, it is apparent the DOJ will continue its focus on the investigation and prosecution of intellectual property and trade secret theft, even if it is conducted by individuals aided and protected by foreign governments. Indeed, this is the first indictment that alleges China is protecting criminal hackers in return for their services.

In our initial post summarizing the China Initiative, we encouraged U.S. companies operating in China and Chinese companies to remain on guard for trade secret issues. These recent and high-profile developments only further emphasize that guidance.

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Chinese and Russian Hackers Targeting COVID-19 Vaccine Research - JD Supra

US to Pay Johnson and Johnson $1 Billion for COVID-19 Vaccine – Voice of America

August 6, 2020

The U.S. has agreed to pay Johnson and Johnson more than $1 billion to create 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine in a deal announced Wednesday by the company.The Johnson and Johnson vaccine is in its experimental phase, currently using early-stage human trials in the U.S. and Belgium. Late-stage human trials of the vaccine are scheduled for September, according to Johnson and Johnsons Chief Scientific Officer Dr. Paul Stoffels.We are scaling up production in the U.S. and worldwide to deliver a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine for emergency use, said Stoffels.As part of the agreed-upon deal, the U.S. can order up to 200 million additional doses.The U.S. already has given the company $456 million to work on creating a vaccine. Johnson and Johnsons goal is to deliver more than 1 billion doses of the vaccine by 2021.The vaccine the company is working on, Ad26.COV2.S, uses the same technology previously used by the company for its experimental Ebola vaccine, which was used in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2019.If Johnson and Johnson produces the vaccine, it will deliver it to the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) on a not-for-profit basis. The vaccine will be available after approval for emergency use authorization by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.So far, this is Johnson and Johnsons first deal to provide doses of its potential vaccine to a country, although the company also is in talks with the European Union.In addition, a few other companies also have made deals with the U.S. for potential COVID-19 vaccines. The U.S. recently announced a deal with drugmakers Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline for up to $2.1 billion for 100 million doses of a vaccine.In late July, deals between the U.S. and Pfizer and BioNTech were announced, as well, totaling $1.95 million for 100 million doses of a potential COVID-19 vaccine.

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US to Pay Johnson and Johnson $1 Billion for COVID-19 Vaccine - Voice of America

Looking beyond COVID-19’s spike protein for the next wave of vaccines – FierceBiotech

August 6, 2020

Most ongoing vaccine development efforts against the novel coronavirus use the spike protein on the surface of SARS-CoV-2 in the hopes of inducing neutralizing antibodies that can directly block the virus from infecting healthy cells. But there could be one major caveat to that approach: The antibody response to the virus, mediated by B cells of the immune system, appears to wane quickly.

Thats why a research team led by immuno-oncology biotech TScan Therapeutics turned to another key component of the immune responseT cellsin the hopes of informing the future development of vaccines, treatments and diagnostics.

By studying memory CD8+ T cells from patients who recovered from COVID-19, the team pinpointed the dominant targets of T cells during the natural cellular response. The majority of the targets they found resided outside of the spike protein, according to data published on journal preprint site medRxiv.

Several companies have reported encouraging early-phase clinical data from their vaccine trials, reporting that the candidates induced neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 at levels comparable to or above those of recovered COVID-19 patients. However, it remains unclear whether these antibodies can protect people from an infection or how long the protection, if any, will last.

RELATED:Pfizer reports strong T-cell response to COVID-19 vaccine

Previous studies of two other coronavirusesSARS and MERSshowed that the increases in antibodies could drop quickly to almost undetectable concentrations in recovered patients, whereas memory CD8+ T cells persisted for years. These T cells are able to recognize specific antigens and can launch an immediate immune attack upon re-encountering a pathogen.

A recent non-peer-reviewed paper by researchers at Kings College Londonreported a rapid decline in neutralizing antibody titers in most COVID-19 patients within three months after COVID-19 symptom onset.

Such findings suggest that T cells might play a more important role in long-term immunity against the novel coronavirus, the TScan-led team figured. So the researchers used a genomewide screening technology to look for sites in SARS-CoV-2 that are recognized by the memory CD8+ T cells of convalescent patients. TScan has been utilizing the same platform to identify new antigens in cancer for the design of T-cell receptor cell therapies. It recently inked a $30 million upfront deal with Novartis to work on such therapies for solid tumors.

The team focused on six most prevalent human leukocyte antigen (HLA) types. HLA regulates the cell surface molecules that present antigenic proteins to the receptors on T cells.

RELATED:Moderna's COVID-19 jab spurs 'robust' immune response in first published data

For each HLA type, the COVID-19 patients' T cells largely recognized the same three- to eight-most targeted sites, called immunodominant epitopes, on the virus, the researchers found. Strikingly, of the 29 epitopes the researchers identified, only three resided in the spike protein, which is the target of most vaccines currently in development.

Whats more, these immunodominant targets were mostly absent in four commonly circulating coronaviruses, indicating that prior infection with these less serious coronaviruses might notprovide T-cell-based immunity to SARS-CoV-2, the researchers wrote in the study.

Identifying the most critical T-cell targets could form the basis of a second-generation vaccine, potentially an important follow-on approach to the spike protein vaccines that are currently being developed, TScans chief scientific officer, Gavin MacBeath, said in a statement. The discoveries may also guide the development of novel therapeutic agents and T-cell-based diagnostic tests to determine immunity, the company said.

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Looking beyond COVID-19's spike protein for the next wave of vaccines - FierceBiotech

Sir Jeremy Farrar: Covid-19 vaccine ready in 2020 and 2021 – BBC News

August 6, 2020

The director of the Wellcome Trust, Sir Jeremy Farrar, has said he believes a vaccine against coronavirus will be available in 2020 and 2021.

Speaking to Hardtalk's Stephen Sackur he said there had been huge progress in vaccinology over the last 10 years.

"In the last seven months since I have been involved, the progress is absolutely staggering and there are now first generation vaccines, theres probably five or six of them from the US, from Europe, from China, from Russia that are becoming available," Sir Jeremy said.

He also warned that the first generation vaccines would not solve everything and diagnostics, treatment and behavioural changes were also important.

Watch the full interview on Wednesday 5 August 2020 on BBC World News or watch again on BBC iPlayer (UK only)

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Sir Jeremy Farrar: Covid-19 vaccine ready in 2020 and 2021 - BBC News

NIH director on when the COVID-19 vaccine will be available and who gets it first – KHOU.com

August 6, 2020

Dr. Francis Collins also offered his thoughts on whether Houston should reopen schools to in-person learning.

The third stage of a clinical trial is underway and about 30,000 volunteers are expected to take part. Vaccine candidates will be tested at 89 clinical research sites in the United States.

Here's what Dr.Collins had to say about the vaccine.

Q: How long before a vaccine is available to the public?

Collins: "We would imagine it's going to take at least three months to find out whether it's safe and effective. So, we're talking about later this year, probably about the end of the year before that decision gets made by the FDA. And of course, it's not just one vaccine trial. There's actually about seven of them that are going to be going forward in the course of the next two or three months. And that's good right up putting all of our eggs in one basket. But count on it. By the end of this year, we should have data to say whether one or more of these vaccines turns out to be a winner, in which case we're going to want to start to distribute it as quickly as possible to the people at high risk."

Q: Who gets the vaccine first?

Collins: "Well, we're doing something it's never been done before, which is actually manufacturing millions, tens of millions, of doses of each of these vaccines even before we know if they work because we don't want to have a long gap there waiting for the manufacturing to happen.

"But still, we won't have enough for every American at the end of this year. So there will have to be priorities. Certainly, people who are at high risk are going to be at the top of that list. People with chronic illnesses, the elderly ... African-Americans, Latinos seem to be hit particularly hard with this disease. All of those considerations will need to be made."

Q: How many doses does each person have to get and how long will it take to vaccinate everybody?

Collins: "Well, the vaccine trial that's going on right now is a two-dose regimen. You get one injection on day one and another on Day 28.

"Kind of like a booster because, you know, that's going to give a better immune response. To vaccinate everybody in America in 2021 is going to take a while. But we do have a plan about how to scale up the number of doses necessary to achieve that. But everybody needs to recognize that will take several months and it will have to be done so that the highest risk people get first in line."

Q: How long before we know if it's providing herd immunity?

Collins:"Herd immunity generally requires something around 70 or 80 percent of the population to be immune to the disease. So you'd have to immunize that proportion of a particular community in order for that to kick in. Herd immunity, of course, gets to the point where the virus doesn't have enough vulnerable people around to propagate itself, and then it kind of fades away. We're a long way from that right now. By late spring, we might get.

Q: When kids should go back to school?

Collins: "I think this has to be considering the community circumstances. If you're in a community where the virus is almost not apparent at all and people are ready to go back to school, we know it's good for kids to be at school.

"I think Houston needs to be really thoughtful about whether this is a safe thing to do right now. We do know that kids can get infected. We certainly know their teachers can. So every school district has to look at the evidence and try to decide whether the benefits are worth the risk if the virus is actively spreading. It may not be the time to bring everybody back."

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NIH director on when the COVID-19 vaccine will be available and who gets it first - KHOU.com

VBI Vaccines rallies 11% on funding to advance COVID-19 vaccine – Seeking Alpha

August 6, 2020

Canada's Strategic Innovation Fund has awarded up to C$56M to VBI Vaccines (NASDAQ:VBIV) to support the development of its COVID-19 vaccine program VBI-2900 through Phase 2.

The company is currently collaborating with the National Research Council of Canada on preclinical studies aimed at selecting the best candidate for clinical trials, expected to start by year-end.

Shares up11%on average volume.

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VBI Vaccines rallies 11% on funding to advance COVID-19 vaccine - Seeking Alpha

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