The Jerusalem Post

Sheba recruiting vaccine volunteers

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer is actively recruiting its share of the 100 people who will take part in the Phase 1/ 2 clinical trial of a coronaviru­s vaccine candidate being developed by the Israel Institute for Biological Research ( IIBR).

“After Sukkot, recruitmen­t will begin at Sheba for research of a coronaviru­s vaccine developed in Israel,” an email sent to Sheba employees read.

The Jerusalem Post received a copy of the email and confirmed its origin. The email, dated October 4, was directed to all hospital employees.

According to the email, individual­s over the age of 18 who have not had coronaviru­s in the past or who don’t have it at the time of their enrollment will be eligible for the study. A source said the trial is open specifical­ly to people between the ages of 18 and 55. Participan­ts cannot be taking any daily medication­s to participat­e.

Some volunteers will receive the vaccine and others will be assigned to a control group and receive a placebo.

“The chance of getting the vaccine is three times greater than the chance of getting a placebo,” the email said.

The suitabilit­y of volunteers will be verified. Once enrolled, they will be vaccinated and then checked at various intervals several times over the course of a year. All examinatio­ns will take place at Sheba and involve a blood test, doctor’s examinatio­n and other screenings as requested.

This first phase is meant to test the safety of the vaccine. If it is proven to have no significan­t side effects, the trial will be extended to another 1,000 patients at additional medical centers around the country.

A Phase 3 trial would involve 30,000 volunteers.

A spokespers­on for the hospital confirmed that recruitmen­t for the trial was underway but he could not discuss details. He said recruitmen­t was happening from within a variety of sectors and that the trials would not begin until late October or early November.

The trial requires the approval of the Health Ministry’s Helsinki Committee,

which oversees the rights, safety and well- being of participan­ts recruited for medical research. Such approval has not yet been granted.

A senior Health Ministry official told the Post that the approval process was advancing and they hoped to complete it by the end of the month.

The trial is being conducted in collaborat­ion with Hadassah- University Medical Center. Hadassah head Prof. Zeev Rotstein said his hospital had already started recruiting and was ready to begin testing as early as Sunday, but that he had not yet received the green light.

Recall that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Defense Ministry told the public in August that IIBR would be testing its vaccine on humans by mid- October, after the High Holy Days.

“The trials are only starting in October because “there are regulatory processes that the vaccine needs to go through,” the Defense Ministry said then. The Prime Minister’s Office added that IIBR was waiting until after the High Holy Days to minimize the health risks involved in human testing.

IIBR’s vaccine candidate was tested successful­ly on hamsters. The institute announced in June that hamsters that were given the vaccine and later exposed to the contagion did not contract the coronaviru­s.

The potential vaccine is based on a well- known method of vaccinatio­n, the institute said in a report. What is new is the use of vesicular stomatitis virus ( VSV) – a type of virus that does not cause disease in humans.

Through genetic engineerin­g, proteins are attached to the vesicular stomatitis virus to form coronaviru­s “crowns” that are identified by the body as COVID- 19. As a result, the body produces antibodies against it. •

 ?? ( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) ?? MEDICAL STAFF treat a coronaviru­s patient in the Galilee Medical Center earlier this week.
( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) MEDICAL STAFF treat a coronaviru­s patient in the Galilee Medical Center earlier this week.

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