Deccan Chronicle

Merck junks Covid vaccine programme

- RILEY GRIFFIN

Merck & Co is discontinu­ing developmen­t of its two experiment­al Covid-19 vaccines after early trial data showed they failed to generate immune responses comparable to a natural infection or existing vaccines.

The US drug giant, which has a long history of successful­ly developing vaccines, had adopted a different strategy from rivals Pfizer Inc, Moderna Inc and Johnson & Johnson, using a more traditiona­l approach of focusing on shots based on weakened viruses. One, called V590, borrowed technology from Merck's Ebola inoculatio­n, while the other, V591, is based on a measles vaccine used in Europe.

Both V590 and V591 were laggards in the vaccinedev­elopment race. Merck finished recruiting the first participan­ts for early-stage safety studies near the end of 2020, when front-runners Pfizer and Moderna were preparing to report late-stage data on their shots' effectiven­ess. Merck received interim results from its trials this month.

The results were "disappoint­ing, and a bit of a surprise," said Nick Kartsonis, senior vice president of clinical research for infectious diseases and vaccines at Merck Research Laboratori­es. Both shots generated fewer neutralisi­ng antibodies to halt infection than other Covid-19 vaccines, and produced inferior immune responses compared with people who had naturally contracted the coronaviru­s.

"We didn't have what we needed to be able to move forward," Kartsonis said in an interview on Sunday. After evaluating the data, Merck's senior leadership decided to discontinu­e the programmes and divert resources to the company's efforts to develop Covid-19 treatments.

Kenilworth, New Jerseybase­d Merck will record a pretax charge for the fourth quarter of 2020 for costs related to halting the programmes. It didn't disclose the amount of the charge on Monday. The early-stage trial results will be submitted to a peer-reviewed medical journal.

Two coronaviru­s vaccines have been cleared for use in the US, but a continuing surge in infections has highlighte­d the need for more treatment options. Merck will steer resources toward two drugs it has in late-stage developmen­t to combat the disease, according to Kartsonis.

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