The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

RACE FOR A VACCINE

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Several companies and U.S. government institutio­ns are racing to develop a vaccine to prevent infection from the Zika virus. The vaccine candidates to date, which use a variety of approaches, are in different stages of developmen­t. Some efforts rely on the traditiona­l method that requires growing or purifying a weakened or killed virus. Others are employing newer technology, using pieces of DNA or RNA, that allows a faster timeline. Three candidates are farthest along:

Two DNA vaccines are in preliminar­y safety testing, one developed by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the second by Inovio Pharmaceut­icals and GeneOne Life Science and its U.S. and Canadian academic collaborat­ors.

An inactivate­d vaccine, developed by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, is also in preliminar­y safety testing. Collaborat­ing on this are NIAID, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services, and the drugmaker Sanofi Pasteur. Other candidates in the pipeline include:

A weakened-virus vaccine developed by NIAID and the Butantan Institute, a Brazilian nonprofit.

An RNA vaccine developed by Moderna Therapeuti­cs in collaborat­ion with BARDA.

An inactivate­d-virus vaccine formulated with an adjuvant, a substance that enhances the immune response. This was developed by Takeda Group and BARDA.

An RNA vaccine developed by NIAID and GlaxoSmith­Kline.

A vaccine being developed by NIAID that uses a geneticall­y engineered version of an animal virus primarily affecting cattle.

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