Times Colonist

COVID-19 vaccine results ‘promising’

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The first of four experiment­al COVID-19 vaccines being tested by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech showed encouragin­g results in very early testing of 45 people, the companies said Wednesday.

Study volunteers given either a low or medium dose, in two shots about a month apart, had immune responses in the range expected to be protective, when compared with some COVID-19 survivors, according to the preliminar­y results.

Side-effects were typical for vaccines, mostly pain at the injection site and fever.

The report has been submitted for publicatio­n in a scientific journal but not yet reviewed. With its other potential candidates still in the earliest stage of testing, Pfizer aims to open a large-scale study this summer but can’t yet say which shot is best to include.

But researcher­s didn’t administer a second shot of the highest dose initially tested, sticking with the low and medium doses. The higher-dose shot caused more injection reactions without apparent added benefit.

About 15 different COVID-19 vaccine candidates are in human testing worldwide, with several poised to begin huge, last-stage studies to prove if they really work.

Different companies are pursuing different types of vaccines, boosting the odds that at least one approach might work — although there’s no guarantee.

The Pfizer and BioNTech candidates use a piece of the coronaviru­s genetic code to prime the body to recognize and attack the virus.

Earlier this week, Inovio Pharmaceut­icals said its gene-based vaccine candidate showed encouragin­g results in similar early testing in 40 volunteers. The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education.

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