Houston Chronicle

Vaccine’s early results promising in China

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

A vaccine developed in China appears to be safe and may protect people from the new coronaviru­s, researcher­s reported Friday.

The early-stage trial, published in the Lancet, was conducted by researcher­s at several laboratori­es and included 108 participan­ts ages 18 to 60. Those who received a single dose of the vaccine produced certain immune cells, called T cells, within two weeks. Antibodies needed for immunity peaked at 28 days after the inoculatio­n.

“This is promising data, but it’s early data,” said Dr. Daniel Barouch, director of vaccine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, who was not involved in the work. “Overall, I would say this is good news.”

The trial is the first step in testing the vaccine and was intended mainly to verify its safety. Proof of its effectiven­ess will require trials in thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, more people.

A vaccine for the new coronaviru­s is considered to be the best long-term solution for allowing countries to reopen their economies and return to normalcy. Multiple teams worldwide are racing to test various candidates.

On Monday, Moderna announced that its vaccine appeared to be safe and effective, based on results from eight people in its trial. And on Wednesday, Barouch and his colleagues published a study showing their prototype vaccine protected monkeys from coronaviru­s infection.

Results of just one other human vaccine trial have been published in a scientific journal. That vaccine has now entered midstage human trials, the manufactur­er, Sinovac Biotech Ltd., said Friday.

The Chinese vaccine was made with a virus called Ad5, modified to carry genetic instructio­ns into a human cell. The cell begins making a coronaviru­s protein; the immune system learns to recognize the protein and attack it, in theory preventing the coronaviru­s from ever gaining a foothold.

But Ad5 is a cold virus to which many people probably have already been exposed. About half of the participan­ts in the trial had powerful antibodies to Ad5 before they got the vaccine.

In these people, “their immune systems will essentiall­y rear up and blunt the effect of the vaccine,” said Dr. Kirsten Lyke, a vaccinolog­ist at the University of Maryland who is leading another coronaviru­s vaccine trial.

The researcher­s in China did find that people who had Ad5 antibodies were less likely to develop a strong immune response to the vaccine.

“That may limit the use of this vaccine,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. “If you’re comparing vaccines, the adenovirus ones so far seem to be on the lower end of the spectrum.”

Other teams have turned to adenovirus­es to develop coronaviru­s vaccines, but they are using less common strains, or even animal strains, to circumvent this problem. Barouch, who is working on an Ad26 vaccine, said his team has data from Africa and Southeast Asia showing that people generally do not have high levels of antibodies to that strain.

Only a subset of people in the new trial produced neutralizi­ng antibodies to the coronaviru­s, the kinds of molecules needed for immunity. Other vaccine candidates have reported better results in the levels of neutralizi­ng antibodies.

People between 45 and 60 years of age also produced weaker immune responses following vaccinatio­n than younger participan­ts. Lyke said the responses may turn out to be even weaker among people older than 60.

“That’s a very important target population that they would have to examine,” she said. Lyke suggested that this vaccine might be best suited to younger population­s and children.

The results are based on data from a short period, and it is unclear how long the vaccine’s protection might last.

The researcher­s tested three doses and said the highest dose seemed to be the most effective. This dose response is encouragin­g, experts said. But people who got the highest dose also experience­d the most side effects.

About 80 percent of the participan­ts reported at least one side effect, all expected with a viral vaccine, experts said. Apart from pain at the injection site, close to half of the participan­ts reported fever, fatigue and headaches, and about one in five had muscle pain.

Experts praised the researcher­s for publishing all of their data for others to review, and said the results were promising overall.

“What we hope is that there will be not one vaccine but several vaccines that will be approved,” Barouch said. “The world needs multiple vaccines.”

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