Los Angeles Times

Lab says it has a coronaviru­s vaccine

Trials for drug made at a facility in San Diego may start soon, but it’ll take years to be approved for use.

- By Mike Freeman Freeman writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Inovio Pharmaceut­icals said that it has produced a pre-clinical vaccine to fight the deadly new coronaviru­s at its lab in San Diego.

The company, based in Plymouth Meeting, Pa., used its proprietar­y DNA-based technology platform to design the synthetic vaccine for the illness known as COVID-19 within hours of getting the genetic sequencing of the virus.

Inovio did not respond to phone calls and emails seeking comment. But in an interview with Yahoo Finance on Friday, Chief Executive Dr. J. Joseph Kim said the company aims to test its vaccine in the U.S. and China as early as this summer.

“Inovio was able to move very rapidly based on our DNA medicine platform where we can design and construct our vaccine just based on the DNA sequence of the virus,” Kim said. “What we have been able to do is bring in the funding to execute the trials quickly. And we are working with different manufactur­ers to scale up as we need.”

Even so, it could take years for Inovio’s synthetic vaccine to clear the testing required by regulators before it can join the fight against the novel coronaviru­s.

As of Monday evening, there were more than 73,300 cases since the virus was first identified in December in Wuhan, China. So far, the disease has killed more than 1,800 people.

Vaccines often undergo extensive clinical trials before they’re deemed safe enough for use. Because there is limited data on the effectiven­ess of synthetic vaccines like Inovio’s compared with convention­ally produced vaccines, it sometimes requires even more research before regulators will sign off on such drugs.

Founded in the early 1980s, Inovio develops DNA-based treatments for cancer and infectious diseases. Its proprietar­y platform triggers potent immune responses in the body to fight certain viruses and cancers.

Last month, Inovio announced that it had received a $9-million grant from the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation to develop a vaccine for COVID-19.

“We view the grant as validation of Inovio’s ongoing CEPI collaborat­ion and an indication that CEPI believes that Inovio has one of the best modern solutions for such outbreaks,” said Jonathan Aschoff, an analyst with Roth Capital Partners.

CEPI is a public-private partnershi­p funded in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Its mission is to develop vaccines to stop future epidemics.

The organizati­on previously pledged up to $56 million to fund Inovio’s vaccine developmen­t for Lassa fever and Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome, which also comes from a coronaviru­s strain.

“Our intention is to leverage our work with Inovio on the Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome coronaviru­s and rapid response platform to speed up vaccine developmen­t” for COVID-19, said Richard Hatchett, head of CEPI.

Inovio isn’t alone in working on a COVID-19 vaccine. Gilead Sciences of Foster City, which makes anti-HIV drugs, announced that it will conduct trials related to its existing treatments. Chicago-based AbbVie is combining two of its anti-HIV drugs in human trials in China in hopes of stopping COVID-19.

In both cases, the companies are testing drugs currently on the market, albeit to treat different diseases.

“I think repurposin­g already approved drugs is a great path, but as history has shown, a true way to contain an outbreak like this requires an effective and safe vaccine, and wide use of that,” Kim told Yahoo Finance.

A host of smaller biotech companies like Inovio are also trying to develop a vaccine, though the extent of their efforts remains unclear.

Inovio has worked on vaccines for health emergencie­s before, including programs for Ebola and the Zika outbreaks about five years ago.

While the company is still pursuing both vaccines, they remain in clinical trials and have not yet come to market.

Meanwhile, vaccines for Ebola have been made available from other companies in certain countries in Africa. As of April 2019, no Zika vaccine had been approved.

For COVID-19, Inovio said it is establishi­ng a coalition of partners and a financial backer to push ahead with pre-clinical developmen­t and Phase 1 human clinical testing in the U.S. this summer.

At the same time, it is working with Beijing Advaccine Biotechnol­ogy Co. to run a trial in China parallel to the U.S. tests.

“Following the Zika viral infection outbreak, Inovio and our partners developed a vaccine that went from bench to human testing in just seven months, the fastest vaccine developmen­t on record in recent decades,” Kim said in a statement. “We believe we can further improve upon this accelerate­d timeline to meet the current challenge.”

 ?? Billy H.C. Kwok Getty Images ?? AN OFFICIAL guards a Hong Kong apartment building. Inovio Pharmaceut­icals, which designed a synthetic vaccine for COVID-19 at its San Diego lab, hopes to begin clinical testing this summer in the U.S. and China.
Billy H.C. Kwok Getty Images AN OFFICIAL guards a Hong Kong apartment building. Inovio Pharmaceut­icals, which designed a synthetic vaccine for COVID-19 at its San Diego lab, hopes to begin clinical testing this summer in the U.S. and China.

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