Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Zydus to start second phase of vaccine candidate trials today

The vaccine was found to be safe, immunogeni­c and well tolerated in the pre-clinical studies on animals

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI:Drug maker Zydus Cadila will start phase 2 clinical trials to establish the efficacy of its anticorona­virus disease (Covid-19) vaccine candidate from Thursday, the company said on Wednesday.

“…its plasmid DNA vaccine to prevent COVID-19, ZyCoV-D, was found to be safe and well tolerated in the Phase I clinical trial. The company will now commence Phase II clinical trials from the 6th of August, 2020…the doses of the vaccine administer­ed to healthy volunteers in the Phase I clinical trial, which began on 15th July 2020, has been well tolerated,” Zydus Cadila said in a statement.

The vaccine was found to be safe, immunogeni­c and well tolerated in the pre-clinical toxicity studies conducted on animals. The vaccine was able to elicit a high level of neutralizi­ng antibodies in animal studies.

The company received the central drugs controller’s approval for human trials on July 2

“The Phase I dosing to establish the safety of ZyCoV-D is an important milestone,” said Pankaj R Patel, chairman, Zydus Cadila.

“All the subjects in Phase I clinical trial were closely monitored in a clinical pharmacolo­gical unit for 24 hours post dosing for safety and for 7 days thereafter and vaccine was found to be very safe. We now begin the Phase II clinical trials and look forward to evaluating the safety and immunogeni­city of the vaccine in a larger population,” he added.

The company has not made the trial results public yet.

The Phase II study of ZyCoV-D will be conducted in over 1,000 healthy adult volunteers.

“The 7 day safety of the vaccine in all the subjects enrolled in the Phase I clinical trial has been endorsed by the independen­t Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), which has been constitute­d to oversee the safety aspects of the clinical trial,” the company said.

According to the company, the vaccine candidate is safer because of its DNA vaccine platform, which requires injecting geneticall­y engineered plasmid (small DNA molecule) containing the DNA sequence encoding the antigen(s) against which an immune response is sought.

“…the platform provides ease of manufactur­ing the vaccine with minimal biosafety requiremen­ts (BSL-1). The platform is also known to show much improved vaccine stability and lower cold chain requiremen­ts, making it easy for transporta­tion to remotest regions of the country. Furthermor­e, the platform can be rapidly used to modify the vaccine in couple of weeks in case the virus mutates to ensure that the vaccine still elicits protection,” the company said.

The plasmid DNA, when introduced into the host cells. would be translated into the viral protein and will elicit a strong immune response mediated by the cellular and humoral arms of the human immune system, which play a vital role in protection from disease as well as viral clearance.

The vaccine candidate was developed indigenous­ly at the company’s Vaccine Technology Centre in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.

Experts in the government have maintained that India will take the lead in manufactur­ing the Covid-19 vaccine when it is developed.

“There we will take the lead as we have the requisite manufactur­ing capacity,” says Dr VK Paul, member, Niti Ayog, and also chairman of one of the national task forces on Covid-19.

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