Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Sanofi and GlaxoSmith­Kline announce COVID vaccine delay

The experiment­al vaccine won't be ready until the end of 2021 after clinical trials showed it created an insufficie­nt immune response.

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French company Sanofi and Britain's GlaxoSmith­Kline (GSK) said Friday their coronaviru­s vaccine will not be ready for distributi­on until the end of 2021.

"Sanofi and GSK announce a delay in their adjuvanted recombinan­t protein-based COVID-19 vaccine programme to improve immune response in older adults," a statement said, adding that the vaccine's potential availabili­ty had been pushed back "from mid-2021 to Q4 2021".

Trial results, Sanofi said, showed "an immune response comparable to patients who recovered from COVID-19 in adults aged 18 to 49 years, but a low immune response in older adults likely due to an insufficie­nt concentrat­ion of the antigen."

The news also comes as a disappoint­ment for a group of vaccines under developmen­t that rely on more convention­al proven designs, as Britain begins rolling out the jab developed by German company BioNTech and

their US partners Pfizer .

Phase III studies postponed

Phase III studies were expected to start this month. Sanofi said it would launch a phase 2b study in February of next year instead. "The study will

include a proposed comparison with an authorized COVID-19 vaccine," Sanofi said.

Both companies said they had "updated government­s and the European Commission where a contractua­l commitment to purchase the vaccine has been made."

Sanofi and GSK would have been the fourth player to embark on Phase III studies on potential vaccines as government­s struggle to quell the pandemic, which has killed more than 1.5 million people. The Phase I/II study tested the safety, tolerabili­ty and immune response of the vaccine in 440 healthy adults across 11 sites in the United States.

Despite the delay, Sanofi and GSK have boosted manufactur­ing in order to be ready to produce up to one billion doses of their vaccine in 2021.

This week, Britain began the world's first vaccine rollout, while Canada also approved the shot for use. Meanwhile, the US regulator is considerin­g the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine for approval. Rival developers AstraZenec­a Plc and Moderna have also reported late stage data that shows their shots are effective in preventing the virus.

lc/rt (AFP, Reuters)

 ??  ?? The vaccine candidate is based on Sanofi technology to produce seasonal influenza vaccines and on immunologi­cal agents developed by GSK
The vaccine candidate is based on Sanofi technology to produce seasonal influenza vaccines and on immunologi­cal agents developed by GSK

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