Belfast Telegraph

Oxford vaccine is both safe and ready For roll-out, research finds

- By Nina Massey

THE University of Oxford’s coronaviru­s vaccine induces an immune response and is safe, according to more data published by researcher­s.

The UK has secured 100 million doses of the jab which the university is developing with pharmaceut­ical giant AstraZenec­a.

And the Medic i n e s and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency is currently considerin­g whether or not to grant approval for the vaccine to be rolled out.

The research published on Thursday includes data from phase one/two clinical trials of the Chadox1 ncov-19 Covid-19 vaccine, and shows why the team decided to move to a two-dose regimen in ongoing phase three trials.

The data also shows how the vaccine, developed with AstraZenec­a, induces broad antibody and T cell functions.

Professor Katie Ewer at the University of Oxford said: “This highly detailed analysis of the immune responses to Chadox1 ncov-19 further underpins the potential of this vaccine to induce protection against Covid-19 disease and provides additional reassuranc­e of the safety of this approach.

“Using these advanced immunologi­cal techniques, we can better understand the different cellular and antibody-mediated mechanisms that contribute to the protection afforded by this vaccine, as demonstrat­ed in the recent data from the subsequent phase three trials.”

Previous studies have shown that in order to develop any vaccine against Sars-cov-2 corona

virus, two key elements of the immune system need to be activated. These involve stimulatin­g antibodies against the coronaviru­s spike protein, as well as robust T cell responses.

The findings are reported in two papers, both released in the journal Nature Medicine.

One paper outlines the early-stage planning involved in the design of phase trials to investigat­e two booster dose schedules — a standard dose followed by a second standard dose and a standard dose followed by a lower dose.

Researcher­s used data from this to support the change to a two-dose regimen in the ongoing phase three trials.

The booster doses of the vaccine induced stronger antibody responses than a single dose, with the standard dose/standard dose activating the best response — supporting the decision to move to a two-dose vaccine regimen in phase three trials.

The paper also shows that many different antibody functions are triggered by the vaccine that may be important in protecting against the disease.

‘This underpins the vast potential of this vaccine’

 ??  ?? Katie Ewer
Katie Ewer

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland