Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Will there be a COVID-19 vaccine? – Harvard Health – Harvard Health

July 18, 2020

Q. Will we have a vaccine to prevent COVID-19 and, if so, when?

A. I'm optimistic because never in human history has so much scientific time and effort been spent trying to make a vaccine. But it won't it be easy. As fast as possible, the vaccine scientists need to prove, first, that a vaccine is safe (minimal side effects) and, second, that it works to reduce a person's risk of getting the disease. Then they need to produce enough of it to immunize most of the 7.6 billion people on earth. Doing all of this within two to three years of a new virus being discovered would be an unprecedented achievement.

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Will there be a COVID-19 vaccine? - Harvard Health - Harvard Health

What will it take to make an effective vaccine for COVID-19? – Chemical & Engineering News

July 18, 2020

In brief

COVID-19 vaccines are being developed with a previously unimaginable urgency. More groups are working faster than ever before to develop shots that will protect us from the novel coronavirus, and hopefully bring an end to the pandemic. At first glance, the more than 160 vaccine programs seem remarkably similar, mostly focused on inducing immunity to the coronavirus spike protein. A closer look reveals many differences, including the types of vaccine technologies deployed, how the spike protein is modified and displayed to our immune systems, and the kinds of immune responses these different approaches will elicit.

There was a moment, just over 200 days ago, when wed never heard of a coronavirus, when everything we did wasnt shrouded with the specter of COVID-19. We crammed into living rooms, sang, danced, clinked glasses, showed 2019 out the door. We eagerly welcomed the new decade, filled calendars, and planned trips. Hugs and handshakes werent a health threat. Walking past someone in a crowded grocery store wasnt anxiety inducing. Pictures of crowded beaches and bars didnt evoke anger. How the world has changed.

In early January, no one could have known how truly catastrophic this novel coronavirus would be. Yet before this particular virus, SARS-CoV-2, was discovered, a few prescient people had already begun preparing for it. For decades, virologists have warned of an impending pandemic. Were overdue, they said. Some groups even had the foresight to begin developing vaccines for a different coronavirus. Once SARS-CoV-2 emerged, those groups had a template to begin making vaccines for the yet-to-be-named disease, COVID-19.

As the pandemic grew, other companies and academic teams started working on their own vaccines for COVID-19. By early April, more than 100 programs were reportedly underway. Even then, vaccines remained a distant prospect. Amid shutdowns and social distancing, we simply yearned for summer, for a break from the virus. The reprieve never came.

Vaccines, for all intents and purposes, were the backup plan. Now, we need them more than ever.

Without a vaccine, I dont think we can put a lid on this, says Paul Young, a virologist developing a COVID-19 vaccine at the University of Queensland. It will continue to be a fire that rages through the world for quite some time until literally everyone is infected unless we are able to intervene.

For nearly 7 long months, SARS-CoV-2 has pushed us to our limits. By mid-July, the virus had infected more than 13 million people and killed more than 580,000. About a quarter of those recorded cases and deaths belong to the US, a fraction likely to rise as so many Americans seemingly give up on the simple public health precautions that other countries have used to curtail the spread of the virus.

Yet there is cause for hope. In those same 7 short months, scientists have made strides that might normally take 7 years. Companies are beginning large trials with tens of thousands of people this month to see if their experimental vaccines can prevent disease. The pandemic has spurred the fastest vaccine development programs in history. While some groups are pushing to have vaccines available this winter, maybe sooner, others think such timelines are preposterous, and potentially reckless. Many questions remain, but there are two things that nearly everyone can agree on.

First, we need a vaccine to end this pandemic. There is no doubt, says Daria Hazuda, vice president of infectious diseases discovery at Merck Research Laboratories. Given how widespread this is globally I just dont think it is going to go away by itself. Second, scientists are confident that at least one vaccine, and hopefully more, will eventually work. There is every reason to believe that we can make a vaccine against this kind of virus, says Paul Offit, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia. I think it is very likely that we will have an effective vaccine by the middle of next year, he adds.

From that consensus, however, opinions diverge.

On the surface, all COVID-19 vaccine candidates have the same goal: generate an immune response that protects you from the virus. But under the hood, these vaccines use a range of technologiesfrom tried and true to new and untestedto teach our bodies how to defend itself against the virus.

This summer, C&EN interviewed more than three dozen scientists, doctors, and business leaders to illuminate the complementary, and occasionally conflicting, strategies employed by groups developing the most advanced and well-funded COVID-19 vaccines. Theres much to learn still, and more definitive answers will come in time, but we already know the questions we need to be asking to make an effective vaccine.

Heres how we get back to normal.

I. How hard is it to make a vaccine against a virus?

Scientists have devised many ways to protect against an infection. In mid-July, the World Health Organization had counted 23 COVID-19 vaccine programs in clinical testing, and another 140 in preclinical development. This is just an unprecedented effort, every possible vaccine strategy is being used, including ones that have never been used before, Offit says.

The most traditional approach to making a vaccine is to simply use the virus itself, allowing your immune cells to learn how to fight it without you actually having to suffer through the disease. Viruses can either be left alive but attenuatedwhere scientists take all the chutzpah out of itor they can be killed with chemicals and heat that leave them unable to replicate. Historically, some of the most effective vaccines, such as those for measles, polio, and smallpox are attenuated or inactivated vaccines.

Credit: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

A vial with an experimental COVID-19, vaccine at Novavax ln Gaithersburg, Maryland

Today, the most popular approaches for making new vaccines all focus on isolating the specific part of the virus believed to be most important for immunity. For SARS-CoV-2, that part is incontrovertibly the spike proteinimmediately recognizable in cartoons of the virus as the mushroom-like knobs studding its spherical surface. The coronavirus uses these spike proteins to grab hold of a human protein called ACE2, the first step in an infection. Nearly every COVID-19 vaccine candidate shares the objective of trying to prevent this interaction between the spike protein and ACE2.

Giving our immune cells target practice with a harmless form of the spike protein should allow them to halt the real virus in its tracks. A large number of groups are working on making the spike protein itself, detached from the virus, as the primary vaccine ingredient. Genetic engineering allows scientists to easily copy and paste the genetic code of the spike protein into cells that are optimized to grow in large vats, where they crank out large quantities of the protein. Vaccines for hepatitis B, shingles, and other diseases are made with this approach, which yields whats known as a subunit protein vaccine.

But developing manufacturing processes for any of these more traditional vaccines typically takes months, if not much longer. Making attenuated or inactivated vaccines requires special facilities with extra safety precautions to grow large numbers of the actual virus, while subunit protein vaccines require scientists to optimize cells that can make the viral protein and then patiently wait for the cells to multiply.

Recently, theres been growing excitement for experimental vaccines that take a different and faster route. Based on newer technologies, these vaccines simply contain the genetic code for the spike protein, and come in several forms, including DNA, messenger RNA, and viral vectorswhere a harmless virus is rejiggered into a gene-delivery vessel. But the end goal for all of them is the same: transport the genetic instructions for the spike protein into human cells in order to temporarily turn those cells into spike protein factories. No DNA or mRNA vaccines have ever received regulatory approval, and only two viral vector vaccinesboth to prevent Ebola virushave been licensed for humans.

Without a vaccine, I dont think we can put a lid on this, It will continue to be a fire that rages through the world for quite some time until literally everyone is infected unless we are able to intervene.

Paul Young, virologist, University of Queensland

Frank DeRosa, the chief technology officer of the mRNA company Translate Bio, explains that mRNA vaccines let our own cells make the spike protein just like they would if we were infected with the real virus. These vaccines, along with DNA and viral vector vaccines, allow the spike protein to be trafficked to the cell membrane surface where it is displayed, or else chopped up and presented in pieces to immune cells. You are just letting the body do what it would do normally, DeRosa says. Thats one of the advantages of mRNA.

Gene-based vaccines should also allow the protein to undergo glycosylation, a cellular process of tacking sugars onto the protein in specific patterns, which will give the immune system a more accurate mug shot of the spike protein. These sugar patterns can differ in subunit proteins, depending on the kinds of cells used to manufacture them.

Genetic vaccines have another key advantage: they are breathtakingly fast to design and produce. The only thing that changes significantly between two genetic vaccines is the segment of code being delivered. The manufacturing process for one RNA is a lot like the manufacturing process for another RNA, says Phil Dormitzer, Pfizers chief scientific officer for viral vaccines. The same is largely true for DNA vaccines, and true to a lesser degree for viral vector vaccines. Its why most of the fastest moving programs for COVID-19 are gene-based vaccines.

The current record speed for making a modern vaccine is Mercks viral vector vaccine for Ebola, which took 5 years to design, test, and earn government approval. For COVID-19, many companies say that process could be collapsed into a year or two. Some firms, including AstraZeneca, Moderna, and Pfizer, expect to have efficacy data this fall, and the US government plans to preorder 300 million doses ready for distribution by January 2021.

Those timelines have plenty of skeptics. The notion that we can have something done by the fall is frankly ludicrous, that is just not going to happen, says Kenneth Kaitin, director of the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. I would suspect that by this time next year we are still going to be looking forward to when that first vaccine hits the market.

More than 160 vaccines are in the works to prevent COVID-19. Here are the major types of technologies being used to make them.

Attenuated and inactivated virus vaccines

Attenuated virus vaccines contain a living but weakened version of SARS-CoV-2. Inactivated virus vaccines contain SARS-CoV-2 that has been killed with heat or chemicals like -propiolactone or formalin. Several childhood vaccines are attenuated or inactivated virus vaccines.

Subunit protein vaccines

Subunit protein vaccines contain the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which the virus uses to enter human cells. These vaccines often include adjuvants, which are molecules that stimulate the innate immune system to help simulate a natural infection. More groups are developing subunit protein vaccines for COVID-19 than any other technology.

Viral vector vaccines

Viral vector vaccines use a different virussuch as the adenovirus, measles virus, or vesicular stomatitis virusthat is genetically engineered to carry the gene for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which will be made by our cells. Viral vector vaccines for preventing Ebola have recently been approved, but others are still experimental.

Nucleic acid vaccines

Nucleic acid vaccines encode genetic instructions for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into DNA, delivered into our cells with an electric shock, or RNA, delivered into our cells via a lipid nanoparticle. These vaccines can be rapidly designed and manufactured, but no DNA or RNA vaccine has been approved for humans.

II. Does the immune system view all vaccines equally?

Most vaccine developers believe that the potential protection offered by these vaccines hinges on teaching our immune cells to make the right kind of antibodies. In theory, antibodies can bind to any part of the spike protein, but only certain ones, the so-called neutralizing antibodies, bind to the spike protein in a manner that prevents the virus from infecting our cells.

Neutralizing antibodies are the most important biomarker to follow in the vaccine studies, and higher the antibody titers, the better, says John Shiver, senior vice president for global vaccines R&D at Sanofi.

You might imagine that the best way to get those high levels of neutralizing antibodies is to simply present the spike protein in its most natural form. But the spike protein is a wily shapeshifter, and many groups think that tweaking the spike protein will be necessary to induce a good neutralizing antibody response.

After the spike protein binds to ACE2, it undergoes a dramatic transformation. A spring-loaded portion of the spike shoots into the human cell membrane and then pulls the virus and cell so close together that their membranes fuse. This allows the virus to spill its genes and guts into the cell, where it begins replicating.

So scientists think there are probably two major ways an antibody can prevent infection: it can either directly block the spikes interaction with ACE2 in the first place, or it can gum up the spikes spring-loaded machinery and impede its fusion with our cells.

In 2016, while scientists were studying the spike protein of a different coronavirus, they discovered that embedding two prolinesthe most rigid of amino acidsin a particular part of the spike helped lock it into the shape that it takes before binding ACE2. Many researchers believe it is crucial to show your immune cells this so-called prefusion form of the spike protein in order to make antibodies that prevent infection. In contrast, if the vaccine teaches the immune system to make antibodies to the postfusion form, the shape the spike protein takes after binding to a cell, those antibodies will bind to the spike too late to prevent infection, says Andrew Ward, a structural biologist at Scripps Research who co-led the study.

Before the pandemic, that double proline mutation, called the 2P mutation, proved generalizable to several coronavirus spike proteins. So when SARS-CoV-2 emerged in early January, researchers were able to quickly add this mutation into the design of a COVID-19 vaccine. The mRNA company Moderna and researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) made a somewhat risky decision to begin manufacturing a COVID-19 vaccine based on the viruss spike sequence and the addition of the 2P mutation without any further experiments, explains Barney Graham, deputy director of the Vaccine Research Center at NIAID.

Since then the 2P mutation has made its way into subunit protein vaccines, mRNA vaccines, and viral vector vaccines. Jason McLellan, the scientist who discovered the 2P mutation, is now looking for other promising ones. His lab at the University of Texas at Austin has tested more than 100 additional mutations, which led to the creation of a novel prefusion spike protein dubbed HexaPro. Its more stable, and, when plugged into an mRNA vaccine, causes cells to make 10 times the amount of spike protein. He says companies making COVID-19 vaccines are already testing HexaPro in lab studies, and his lab is working on further improvement. We are always tweaking, he says. You can kind of do this forever but at some point you just have to pick something and move it forward.

Credit: Jason McLellan

The HexaPro spike protein, invented by Jason McLellans lab at the University of Texas at Austin, contains 6 proline mutations (red and blue spheres) that help stabilize the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in its prefusion structure. The S1 subunit (transparent white) contacts the human cell and the S2 subunit (colored ribbons) contains the spring-loaded machinery that helps the virus fuse with the cell.

Other groups are making their own unique modifications to the prefusion spike. Scientists at the University of Queensland have made a subunit protein vaccine where the trimer of the spike is held together by what Queensland virologist Keith Chappell calls a molecular clamp. It is gripped at the base, and the top has natural flexibility, he says.

Other groups are forgoing the prefusion conformation in favor of a more natural, functional spike protein. That includes the DNA vaccine company Inovio Pharmaceuticals, which used this approach to elicit neutralizing antibodies in people who got its experimental MERS vaccine.

One of Mercks two viral vector vaccines is based on vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), also used to make the firms recently licensed Ebola vaccine, Ervebo. Unlike the adenoviral vector vaccines under development for COVID-19, which just carry the genetic instructions for the spike protein, the VSV viral vector is designed to display the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein on its surface, where it can be used to enter human cells. It is kind of an authentic presentation, says Christopher Parks, whose lab led the design of the vaccine at IAVI, before Merck said it would test it in humans.

We can make effective vaccines quite quickly. But safety is not something that can be measured in a single time point. It has to be observed over a period of time.

David Dowling, vaccine researcher, BostonChildrens Hospital

Another strategy is to use just a key fragment of the spike protein. It turns out that the most potent neutralizing antibodies made by people who recover from COVID-19 almost always target a particular part of the spike protein. That key section, called the receptor-binding domain (RBD), sits at the top of the spike, where it makes direct contact with ACE2 on human cells. For this reason, some groups are developing vaccines that simply use the RBDeither made as a subunit protein or encoded in mRNA.

RBD-based vaccines could have the advantage of helping the immune system focus on developing neutralizing antibodies to the part of the protein that matters the most. Its also a relatively small part of the large spike protein, which could make these vaccines cheaper to manufacture.

But its small size has drawbacks too. Scientists say we typically develop better immune responses against larger proteins. And researchers are starting to discover neutralizing antibodies that bind to other regions of the spike protein outside the RBD as well, ones that might work by halting the viruss fusion to the human cell, rather than by blocking its binding to ACE2. In general, having neutralizing antibodies to multiple sites should limit the viruss ability to mutate and escape neutralization.

One study in monkeys testing six different DNA vaccines all encoding various versions of the spike protein found that the full-length spike protein induced higher levels of neutralizing antibodies than the RBD. A small study testing four variations of subunit proteins in rabbits found the opposite: the RBD vaccine induced the highest levels of neutralizing antibodies.

The RBD might be good enough. And when you are making a vaccine, you just need to make it good enough, NIAIDs Graham says. But, he adds, we just think it is not quite as good as the whole thing.

Pfizer, which is working with the German mRNA company BioNTech, may be the only group that is hedging its bets by testing multiple vaccines in humans: two encoding the full prefusion spike protein and two encoding the RBD. Although you can do plenty of testing preclinically, some questions you really have to answer in clinical trials, says Pfizers Dormitzer.

If a particular paradigm proves most promising, it will be easy to construct a narrative about why one brilliant group had the right idea all along. You can reason your way into believing that any one front-runner vaccine will rise above the others just as easily as you can convince yourself that one approach is destined for failure. But as it stands, we dont know which vaccines will work the best. Although animal studies can give clues about what wont work in humans, the only way to determine how a vaccine will protect against infection is to test it in people.

III. How will our immune system protect us from the virus?

Key milestones in the rapid design, clinical testing, and funding of vaccines for COVID-19

Jan. 10: The first genome sequence of the novel coronavirus, later named SARS-CoV-2, is posted online.

Jan. 13: Moderna announces plans to develop an mRNA vaccine for the novel coronavirus.

Jan. 23: The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) announces vaccine funding for Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Moderna, and the University of Queensland.

March 16: CanSino Biologics and Moderna dose first volunteers in Phase I clinical trials of their vaccines.

March 17: Pfizer announces partnership with BioNTech to develop and test multiple mRNA vaccines.

March 30: Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) and Johnson & Johnson announce they are committing more than $1 billion to develop an adenoviral vector vaccine for COVID-19.

April 16: BARDA awards Moderna up to $483 million to develop and manufacture its mRNA vaccine.

April 30: AstraZeneca announces it will develop the University of Oxfords adenoviral vector vaccine for COVID-19.

May 11: CEPI commits $384 million to Novavaxs COVID-19 vaccine, its largest investment ever.

May 15: US President Donald J. Trump announces Operation Warp Speed to supply 300 million vaccines to the US by January 2021.

May 18: Moderna announces preliminary Phase I data from its vaccine trial via press release.

May 21: BARDA says it will provide up to $1.2 billion for 300 million doses of AstraZenecas vaccine with the first shots arriving in October.

May 22: CanSino publishes the first peer-reviewed data of a Phase I COVID-19 vaccine trial.

May 26: Merck & Co. says it will develop two COVID-19 vaccines originally designed at Themis Biosciencean Austrian company that it acquiredand IAVI.

May 29: Moderna doses the first volunteers in its Phase II clinical trial of its mRNA vaccine.

June 20: A Phase III trial testing the University of Oxfords adenoviral vector vaccine begins in Brazil.

June 24: The state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) announces plans for a Phase III trial of its inactivated virus vaccine for COVID-19.

June 28: 10 million people have been infected and 500,000 people have died from COVID-19.

July 7: BARDA and the US Department of Defense sign a $1.6 billion contract with Novavax for 100 billion doses of its vaccine.

All these vaccine efforts are grounded in the notion that producing high levels of potent neutralizing antibodies will prevent the virus from infecting our cells. Measuring those antibodies, however, is fraught with challenges, and we dont even know what levels we should aim for.

Methods used to quantify that neutralizing antibody response are imperfect. Researchers infect cells in a petri dish with either a real or artificial version of SARS-CoV-2 to see how much of the virus is blocked with a particular concentration of antibody-containing plasma. The real and artificial methods yield different results. And, although those results have been cited as rationale for moving COVID-19 vaccines into large, late-stage trials, there is no standard for how these measurements should be reported.

For instance, some groups report the level of neutralizing antibody that inhibits 50% of the virus, while others use higher bars of 80, 90, or 100%. If you make antibodies that neutralize 90% of the virus, that may not be good enough, NIAIDs Graham says. You want a neutralization that is 100% effective.

The number you get depends on the specifics of the assay you run, so comparing one companys numbers to another companys numbers is tricky, Pfizers Dormitzer says. Until we really establish what a protective level of antibodies is, the numbers may be a relative yardstick, but they dont tell you if you are going to have protection or not.

So far, companies have been using as their baseline the levels of neutralizing antibodies found in convalescent plasma of people who have recovered from COVID-19. But research shows that COVID-19 survivors make relatively low levels of antibodies, and one small study suggests they might only stick around for 2 to 3 months.

Credit: Brian Stauffer

Such studies suggest that a vaccine that mimics a natural infection is a pretty low bar. Immunity equivalent to natural infection may not be enough for this virus. It might need to be higher, says David Corry, an immunologist and allergist at Baylor College of Medicine.

On average, each coronavirus has a couple hundred spike proteins that it can use to grab onto a cell, so the number of neutralizing antibodies circulating in our bodies likely needs to be much higher than the number of viruses attempting to establish an infection. If the antibody levels are not high enough, we may end up with only partial protectionwhere we still get an infection, and might even be able to spread the virus to others, but would be safe from progressing to the most severe forms of COVID-19 that hospitalize people.

But even determining the level of antibodies needed to lessen the brutality of the disease is not straightforward. A level of antibodies in one person might send them off without any symptoms at all, while the same level of antibodies in another person may still leave them very sick, Scripps immunologist Dennis Burton says.

Some scientists say that partial protection is a fine goal for the first generation of COVID-19 vaccines. If you can keep people out of the hospital, to me that is a tremendous success, says Gregory Glenn, president of R&D at Novavax. Such vaccines could save lives, and in a hypothetical world where everyone is vaccinated, most individuals could deal with mild cases of COVID-19, and society could return to normal.

Although vaccine makers have focused on neutralizing antibodies, this type of immune response might not last forever. In a study of 191 people tested for cold-causing coronaviruses over a period of 19 months in New York City, researchers found that 9 people were infected with the same virus twice, and 3 were infected with the same virus three separate times. We dont know if either natural immunity or vaccines can prevent these kind of reinfections with SARS-CoV-2. One experiment showed that monkeys who were infected with high levels of SARS-CoV-2 were protected from reinfection 5 weeks lateralthough that study comes with the major caveat that monkeys dont develop full-blown COVID-19 in the first place.

Theres reason to believe that other parts of the immune system, such as T cells, may be important for longer-lasting immunity. Scientists found that people who were infected with SARS-CoV-1, the virus that caused the eponymous severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2003, still had neutralizing antibodies to the virus 2 years after infection, but not 5 years later. In contrast, researchers recently discovered that some people infected with SARS-CoV-1 back in 2003 still have T cells that recognize the virus all these years later.

While antibodies prevent viruses from infecting cells in the first place, T cells can spot cells that are already infected and selectively kill them, thereby halting the spread of the virus. T cells are also better than antibodies at targeting different parts of the virus. Antibodies target proteins on the outside of the virus, which for SARS-CoV-2 is the spike protein. Yet the spike is just one of 27 proteins encoded in the SARS-CoV-2 genome. The other proteins are located inside the virus, or are made by our own cells when the virus is replicating. T cells, unlike antibodies, can learn to spot molecular fingerprints of these proteins in virus-infected cells.

DNA vaccines and viral vectors are better at inducing T cell responses, while subunit protein vaccines primarily induce antibodies. The traditional attenuated virus vaccines that use a live virusand therefore have all those internal proteinsare good at inducing both T cells and antibodies. Every formulation or platform is different, says Surender Khurana, a vaccine scientist at the US Food and Drug Administration. These different platforms can have different kinds of immune responses, and we dont know which immune response is most relevant.

IV. How good is good enough for a COVID-19 vaccine?

Some vaccines, like the one for measles, provide lifelong immunity to nearly every single person who receives them. Others, such as flu vaccines, are needed every year, and even then sometimes only work 30% of the time. For COVID-19 vaccines, the FDA is aiming for something in-between those extremes. The FDAs recently issued guidelines for COVID-19 vaccine development state that the agency expects a vaccine to either prevent disease, or reduce its severity, in at least 50% of vaccinated people.

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What will it take to make an effective vaccine for COVID-19? - Chemical & Engineering News

Good News: COVID-19 Vaccines Stimulate the Production of Both Antibodies and T-Cells – Reason

July 18, 2020

The COVID-19 vaccine being developed by researchers at Oxford University and the pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca reportedly stimulates the body's immune system in early trials to produce both antibodies and killer T-cells. Antibodies protect against infections by binding to pathogens in order to prevent them from entering or damaging cells, and by coating pathogens to attract white blood cells to engulf and digest them. Longer-lasting killer T-cells work by finding and destroying infected cells in the body that have been turned into virus-making factories.

If this pans out, it's great news. Recent studies have shown that protective antibodies decline steeply in a large proportion of people who have recovered from COVID-19 infections. Swiftly waning levels of antibodies might mean that people could be reinfected and that the vaccines that are being rushed through testing and production would only offer transitory protection against the novel coronavirus. But if the vaccines provoke the immune system to produce T-cells, they could still offer some longer-term protection against coronavirus infections.

While more research needs to be done, some preliminary data suggest that the COVID-19 vaccine being developed by Moderna may also elicit the production of T-cells that react to the coronavirus.

The idea that T-cells could offer protection against the COVID-19 coronavirus is bolstered by new study in Nature. It reports finding T-cell immunity in people who recovered from both COVID-19 and SARS coronavirus infections. The researchers also identified T-cells that react to both coronaviruses in about 50 percent of healthy study subjects who had never been infected by either virus. "This could be due to cross-reactive immunity obtained from exposure to other coronaviruses, such as those causing the common cold, or presently unknown animal coronaviruses. It is important to understand if this could explain why some individuals are able to better control the infection," said study co-author Antonio Bertoletti in a press release from the Duke-National University of Singapore (Duke-NUS) Emerging Infectious Diseases program.

Earlier studies by Swedish and German researchers have also found that a substantial number of subjects who had never had COVID-19 produced a T-cell immune reaction to the virus. It's still speculative, but it looks increasingly likely that a good portion of humanity may already have developed some T-cell immune protection against the novel coronavirus. Nevertheless, the Swedish researchers caution, "It remains to be determined if a robust memory T cell response in the absence of detectable circulating antibodies can protect against" the virus.

"While there have been many studies about the [COVID-19 coronavirus], there is still a lot we don't understand about the virus yet," said Duke-NUS researcher Jenny Low in the aforementioned press release. "What we do know is that T cells play an important role in the immune response against viral infections and should be assessed for their role in combating the [COVID-19 coronavirus], which has affected many people worldwide. Hopefully, our discovery will bring us a step closer to creating an effective vaccine."

Even as COVID-19 vaccines are being tested in clinical trials to determine their safety and efficacy, production for several is being revved up in order to deliver them (if they work) as early as this fall. AstraZeneca announced in June that it planned to manufacture 2 billion dosesof its vaccine, with 300 million slated for delivery to the United States and the United Kingdom by the end of this year.Moderna plans to deliver about 500 million doses per year, and potentially up to 1 billion annual doses starting in 2021. An effective vaccine against this scourge cannot come too soon.

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Good News: COVID-19 Vaccines Stimulate the Production of Both Antibodies and T-Cells - Reason

Commentary: How ‘good’ does a COVID-19 vaccine need to be to stop the pandemic? – CNA

July 18, 2020

NEW YORK CITY: The US is pinning its hopes on a COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine, but will a vaccine alone be enough to stop the pandemic and allow life to return to normal?

The answer depends on a how good the vaccine ends up being.

In a study published on Jul 15 in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, my colleagues and I used a computer simulation of every person in the country to show how effective a vaccine would have to be and how many people would have to get vaccinated to end the pandemic.

We found that a coronavirus vaccines effectiveness may have to be higher than 70 per cent or even 80 per cent before Americans can safely stop relying on social distancing.

By comparison, the measles vaccine has an efficacy of 95 per cent to 98 per cent, and the flu vaccine is 20 per cent to 60 per cent.

That doesnt mean a vaccine that offers less protection would be useless, but it would mean social distancing in some form may still be necessary.

IMPORTANCE OF AN EFFECTIVE VACCINE

Some political leaders have suggested that society will return to normal soon, especially if a vaccine becomes available by the end of the year or early in 2021. Some vaccines are currently in early-stage trials, but that timeline would still be very optimistic.

However, it is important to remember that a vaccine is like many other products: What matters is not just that the product is available but also how effective it is.

Different vaccines may offer different levels of protection. Scientists talk about this as the vaccines efficacy or effectiveness.

If 100 people who havent been exposed to the virus are given a vaccine that has an efficacy of 80 per cent, that means that on average 80 of them would not get infected.

The difference between efficacy and effectiveness is that the former applies when vaccination is given under controlled circumstances, like a clinical trial, and the latter is under real-world conditions. Typically, a vaccines effectiveness tends to be lower than its efficacy.

COMPUTER SIMULATIONS

Since COVID-19 coronavirus vaccines are still under development, now is the time to set vaccine efficacy levels to aim for, as well as to manage expectations. Running computer simulations is really the only way to ethically do this.

Typically, in an epidemic or pandemic, as more people are exposed to the virus, the number of new infections per day steadily increases until it reaches a peak and begins to drop. Of course, how long this takes depends upon how the virus and the response to it may evolve over time.

To stop the pandemic, the number of new infections per day needs to drop to zero, or at least to a very low number, as quickly as possible.

If the COVID-19 pandemic were just beginning and the population infected was close to 0 per cent, the simulations show that vaccine efficacy would have to be at least 60 per cent to stop the coronavirus if the entire population was vaccinated.

Given the number of susceptible people who couldnt be vaccinated because of age or health problems and the number who would refuse to be vaccinated, thats probably impossible.

If only 75 per cent of the population gets vaccinated, the vaccine efficacy would have to be around 70 per cent. If only 60 per cent of people get vaccinated, the threshold goes even higher, to around 80 per cent. Its all about making sure the virus cant find more people to infect.

Those numbers assume that a person infected with the virus infects 2.5 other people on average. If the virus is more contagious, the vaccine has to be more efficient.

Now, the further along the pandemic is, the less the height of the peak can be reduced. Its like climbing a mountain you are already at a certain height. Plus, it is harder to shut a pandemic down when there are more infectious people running around.

So, when 5 per cent of the population has already been infected with the virus, the best that you can do is reduce the peak by around 85 per cent. The difference between 0 per cent and 5 per cent can add up to millions of infections.

So far, about 1 per cent of the US population has been confirmed to have been infected, but officials estimate the actual percentage is much higher.

BETWEEN 60 PER CENT AND 80 PER CENT EFFECTIVE

Based on these findings, a vaccine with an efficacy as low as 60 per cent could still stop the pandemic and allow society to return to normal. However, most if not all of the population would have to be vaccinated.

This seems unlikely, given polls showing that only about three-quarters of Americans say they would get a coronavirus vaccine if assured that it was safe.

With fewer people protected, a vaccine would have to have an efficacy of at least 80 per cent to be able to stop the pandemic by itself, meaning social distancing could be completely relaxed. This can provide a target to aim for when developing COVID-19 coronavirus vaccines.

Again, all of this doesnt mean that a vaccine with a lower efficacy would not be useful. It would mean that social distancing and mask-wearing likely would have to continue until the pandemic runs its course or a vaccine that is actually good enough arrives.

Downloadourappor subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak:https://cna.asia/telegram

Bruce Y Lee is Professor of Health Policy and Management at the City University of New York. This commentary first appeared on The Conversation.

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Commentary: How 'good' does a COVID-19 vaccine need to be to stop the pandemic? - CNA

Jim Cramer: A better way to invest in the Covid-19 vaccine gold rush – CNBC

July 18, 2020

CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday revealed a tangential way that investors can play the Covid-19 vaccine rush without taking on the risk of investing in a developer that loses the race.

"Rather than chasing the Covid=19 vaccine developers that are panning for gold, I want to go with the equipment suppliers that sell the medical equivalent of pans and picks and shovels to the gold miners," the "Mad Money" host said, likening the endeavor to discover a vaccine to the California gold rush of the 19th Century.

Cramer, who has a liking for pharmaceutical names like Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Regeneron, thinks most smaller vaccine developers are risky plays.

The market digested vaccine development updates from Moderna and Johnson & Johnson this week and is anticipating data from a phase one trial of AstraZeneca's own research into a potential vaccine expected to publish on Monday.

"All these stocks though are wild traders. I want to be more thoughtful than just speculate endlessly on who is in front and who isn't. The horse race just continues," Cramer said. "All these little vaccine developers with Covid-19 exposure are roaring here, but there can be only most likely let's say three or four actual winners."

Cramer recommends taking the side door by investing in Abbott Laboratories,Thermo Fisher Scientific, Danaher and Honeywell International.

Abbott Labs, which makes multiple Covid-19 testing kits, saw its stock trade sideways for a few months as the country focused on reopening from the coronavirus lockdown.

Shares, however, are back on the rise, alongside the latest outbreak of the fast-spreading disease across the American South. Abbott Labs closed at a record $99.25 Friday after maturing nearly 3%.

"Right now, Abbott's at $99 and if it breaks out above $100, I'm betting there'll be another leg higher," Cramer said.

Thermo Fisher produces medical instruments and laboratory equipment for the pharmaceutical industry. Those products include supplies for virus samples and tools for drug and vaccine developers.

Stock in Thermo Fisher made a fresh closing record of $395.40 Friday after climbing 0.76% during the trading day.

"The only problem here is that the stock's been such a juggernaut and you haven't really gotten a chance to buy it into weakness," the host said. "I think you can put on a small position, though, here and then hope for a pullback that gives you a better entry point."

Danaher, which recently spun off multiple business to focus on its life sciences and diagnostics arms, rivals Thermo Fisher and has exposure to the world of Covid-19 testing.

Danaher shares also set a new closing high in Friday's session after rallying 1.13% to finish at $190.95.

"Like Thermo Fisher, the stock's had a giant run. You really haven't had a chance to buy it since the March low weakness," he said. "Danaher's got great management though, so put it on your shopping list, because this one's absolutely worth buying into weakness."

Honeywell is a big producer of N95 masks, personal protective equipment and medical equipment. The stock is within 16% of its January closing high.

"This is not a great short-term play. This stock's going to be hobbled until we actually get a vaccine, we know that, but longer term I'm a gigantic believer in Honeywell, and I like that you can get it at a discount right now.This thing sells for less than 18 times 2022 earnings. It's got a solid 2.33% yield," Cramer said. "If you want to buy this one, you should go slowly, because I think you'll get a better entry point down the road."

Disclaimer

Disclosure: Cramer's charitable trust owns shares of Johnson & Johnson and Abbott Laboratories.

Questions for Cramer?Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC

Want to take a deep dive into Cramer's world? Hit him up!Mad Money Twitter - Jim Cramer Twitter - Facebook - Instagram

Questions, comments, suggestions for the "Mad Money" website? madcap@cnbc.com

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Jim Cramer: A better way to invest in the Covid-19 vaccine gold rush - CNBC

Warp Speed initiative aims for COVID-19 vaccine production within 6 weeks: Reuters – FiercePharma

July 18, 2020

The U.S. governmenthas dumped billionsinto COVID-19 vaccine developmentand manufacturing as part of its Warp Speed initiative. Now, withvaccine makers moving rapidlytoward approval, the administration has high hopes at least one shot candidate will start churning out doses within the next six weeks.

With federal backing, at least one COVID-19 vaccine will likely be "actively manufacturing" within the next four to six weeks, a senior Trump administration official told Reuters Monday.

Barring a surprise phase 3 readout and emergency use authorization from the FDA, that manufacturing would likely be "at-risk," meaning the vaccine's makerwould be turning outdoses without knowing whetherthey'll pass regulatory scrutiny.

Operation Warp Speed has infused massive sums into its stable of chosen vaccine hopefuls in recent months, most recently a $1.6 billion deal last week with Maryland-based Novavax. The administration has also funded candidates from Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca, and in June signed a $628 million deal with Maryland-based CDMO Emergent BioSolutions to secure manufacturing space to produce U.S. supply of selected shot candidates.

The senior official told Reuters that the "slate is not closed" on additional agreements and touted the government's $450 million deal with Regeneron last week to help produce its antibody cocktail for COVID-19 as a hopefulroute to treating the disease.

Players in the COVID-19 shot race have long said they would begin manufacturing as early as this summer despite warnings that a vaccine would likely not be available for public use before the end of the year.

But the Trump administration's decision to place a timeline on manufacturing could stoke hopes that a viable vaccine might be in the offing earlier than expected. On the heels of Monday's news, Novavax shares closed the day up nearly 10% at $104.32 per share.

Jefferies analysts said last month that there could be "perhaps multiple vaccines" that notch emergency use approvals by the fourth quarter given the administration's massive investment in development and manufacturing,and President Donald Trump's desire to announce a positive development by Election Day.

Pfizer andBioNTechwhich aren't part of the Warp Speed cadre, but plan to start phase 3 testing this monthsay they could produce up to 100 million doses by the end of 2020 and 1.2 billion doses by the end of 2021for global distribution.

RELATED:Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine could cruise to $5B in salesor more, analysts say

While Novavax's candidate isn't the furthest along in human trials, the biotech has captured the U.S. government's attention, and the company hasbeen fleshing out its executive team to match, including hiring on a manufacturing chief to scale up its production chain.

The vaccine,which combines an antigen generated from the virus' spike protein and the company's proprietary Matrix-M adjuvant,is already in phase 1/2 testing, and the biotech expects to report early data this month.

Ifthe data are promising, the company will move to the phase 2 portion of the study, where investigatorswill look at immunity, safety and disease reduction. The phase 3 efficacy study would enroll up to 30,000 participants and begin in the fall.

Like Moderna, Novavax has never brought a product to market, but it's also advancing a late-stage flu vaccine candidate with plans to file for FDA approval soon.

RELATED:Novavax hires new manufacturing chief to take COVID-19, flu vaccine hopefuls across the finish line

Other candidates have gone steps further than Novavax to secure manufacturing space, with AstraZeneca already touting its ability to produce up to 2 billion doses of the University of Oxford's adenovirus-based COVID-19 shot, AZD1222.

In June, AstraZeneca inkeda $750 million deal with the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance to manufacture and distribute 300 million doses of Oxford's vaccine by the end of 2020. AZ also agreed to a licensing deal with the Serum Institute of India to provide 1 billion doses of the vaccine to low- and middle-income countries, with the goal of 400 million produced by year-end.

RELATED:J&J sews up 5 years of coronavirus vaccine supply in $480M-plus deal with Emergent

Meanwhile, Emergent will also play host to three vaccine candidates at its Baltimore Bayview facility after signing major deals.

Last week, J&J and Emergent signed a five-year work order worth at least $480 million to help produce the New Jersey-based drugmaker's COVID-19 vaccine candidate. Emergent will provide "large-scale" drug substance manufacturing for J&J's recombinant DNA shot beginning in 2021, starting with a $480 million order for the first two years of the deal. For the final three years, the partners would use a "flexible capacity deployment model" to provide annual batches as needed, Emergent said.

AstraZeneca had signed a similar deal with Emergent a month before, securing manufacturing capacity for $87 million. Emergent signed a placeholder deal with Novavax back in March for manufacturing space for its vaccine, but a work order has yet to be fleshed out.

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Warp Speed initiative aims for COVID-19 vaccine production within 6 weeks: Reuters - FiercePharma

Interested in testing a COVID-19 vaccine? Austin-based research company is seeking participants – KXAN.com

July 18, 2020

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Interested in testing a COVID-19 vaccine? Austin-based research company is seeking participants - KXAN.com

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