The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Human trials for Covid-19 vaccine start next week

Imperial College London scientific team to investigat­e formula with immune response

- JANE KIRBY

Human trials of a potential vaccine for Covid-19 will begin in the UK next week.

Imperial College London’s vaccine team, led by Professor Robin Shattock, have developed an RNA vaccine, which delivers genetic instructio­ns to muscle cells to make the “spike” protein on the surface of coronaviru­s.

The presence of this protein provokes an immune response, offering protection against Covid-19.

The vaccine is now due to enter phase one and two human clinical trials next Monday with 300 people.

A further trial involving 6,000 people is planned for October and if these prove successful, Imperial hopes the vaccine could be distribute­d in the UK and abroad early next year.

A separate vaccine from experts at Oxford University is currently undergoing human clinical trials.

Imperial College London has also formed a new social enterprise called Vacequity Global Health (VGH) to develop its vaccine.

Imperial and VGH will waive royalties for the UK and low-income countries “and charge only modest cost-plus prices to sustain the enterprise’s work, accelerate global distributi­on and support new research”, the college said in a statement.

“The social enterprise’s mission is to rapidly develop vaccines to prevent SARS-COV-2 (Covid-19) infection and distribute them as widely as possible in the UK and overseas, including to lowand middle-income countries,” it said.

Prof Shattock added: “We have spent an intense six months to fast-track our vaccine to the clinic – now we are ready to combat the virus through our clinical trials and are grateful to the thousands of people helping us advance the vaccine: from donors, investors and the government to volunteers for our clinical trials.

“These new enterprise­s are the most effective way for us to deliver Covid-19 vaccines quickly, cheaply and internatio­nally, while preparing for future pandemics.”

Gerald Chan, co-founder of Morningsid­e – a private equity and venture capital investment­s group which is supporting the move – said: “No medical interventi­on has saved more lives in human history than vaccines.

“The Imperial vaccine technology is a ground-breaking innovation that is readily scalable.”

Kate Bingham, chairwoman of the UK Vaccine Taskforce, set up by the government, said: “The progress being made in the UK to develop a vaccine that combats coronaviru­s is remarkable and the speed with which Imperial has progressed its self-amplifying MRNA vaccine has been breathtaki­ng.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Human trials of a potential vaccine for Covid-19 are to start at Imperial College London next week.
Picture: PA. Human trials of a potential vaccine for Covid-19 are to start at Imperial College London next week.

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