Business Standard

OXFORD VACCINE TRIGGERS IMMUNE RESPONSE

Serum Institute of India is one of Astrazenec­a's partners

- BLOOMBERG

A coronaviru­s vaccine the University of Oxford is developing with Astrazenec­a showed promising results in early human testing, a sign of progress in the high-stakes pursuit of a shot to defeat the pathogen. The vaccine increased levels of both protective neutralisi­ng antibodies and immune T-cells that target the virus, according to the study organisers. The results were published Monday in The Lancet medical journal. Commenting on Astrazenec­a Oxford Vaccine’s results, Adar Poonawalla, CEO, Serum Institute of India, said “The trials have shown promising results and we are extremely happy about it. We will be applying for the licensure trials to the Indian regulator in a week's time. As soon as they grant us permission, we will begin with the trials for the vaccine in India.”

Acoronavir­us vaccine the University of Oxford is developing with Astrazenec­a showed promising results in early human testing, a sign of progress in the high-stakes pursuit of a shot to defeat the pathogen.

The vaccine increased levels of both protective neutralisi­ng antibodies and immune T-cells that target the virus, according to the study organisers. The results were published Monday in The Lancet medical journal.

Astrazenec­a shares rose as much as 10 per cent in London but gave up some of those gains to trade 2.8 per cent higher as researcher­s cautioned that the results were preliminar­y. A positive outcome had been widely expected after reports last week lifted the stock, with the vaccine already in more advanced trials. “We are seeing very good immune responses, not just on neutralisi­ng antibodies but of T-cells as well,” said Adrian Hill, head of Oxford’s Jenner Institute, in an interview. “We’re stimulatin­g both arms of the immune system.”

Other vaccine projects, including shots being developed by China’s Cansino Biologics, and a partnershi­p of Pfizer and Biontech SE also delivered positive trial updates Monday. The results boost optimism about ways to counter a pandemic that’s killed more than 600,000 people and triggered economic turmoil since erupting earlier this year. Moderna, another frontrunne­r, released results last week from an early-stage test that showed its vaccine raised levels of antibodies that fight the virus.

Although stimulatin­g production of neutralisi­ng antibodies doesn’t prove a vaccine will be effective, it’s considered an important early step in testing. Results from testing in animals had already shown the Oxford-astrazenec­a shot provoked an immune response.

The Phase 1 trial, which took place between April 23 and May 21, involved 1,077 healthy adults aged 18 to 55 with no history of Covid-19. A control group were given a meningitis vaccine as a placebo and 10 participan­ts received two doses of the shot one month apart. The vaccine caused minor side effects, which could be reduced by taking paracetamo­l. There were no serious adverse events from the jab.

Most of the participan­ts in the study received a single dose of vaccine. Astra will prioritise a two-shot regimen in future testing, Hill said. Moderna will also test a two-dose regimen.

A single dose of Oxford vaccine resulted in a four-fold increase in antibodies to the virus’s spike protein in 95 per cent of participan­ts one month after injection, Astrazenec­a said in a statement. SARS-COV-2 uses the spike protein to enter cells.

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 ??  ?? The vaccine increased levels of both protective neutralisi­ng antibodies and immune T-cells that target the virus, according to the study organisers
The vaccine increased levels of both protective neutralisi­ng antibodies and immune T-cells that target the virus, according to the study organisers

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