The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlantas in potential vaccine trial

Emory partners with drug company in developmen­t of possible COVID-19 vaccine.

- Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

Sean Doyle and Claire McDougall are part of a small group willing to put themselves on the line for what they hope will be historic research. They volunteere­d to be given an experiment­al vaccine for COVID-19.

Emory University, partnering with Kaiser Permanente Washington, is testing the investigat­ional vaccine with 17 Atlanta-based participan­ts. An additional 28 coronaviru­s vaccine volunteers are in the Seattle area, Emory officials said.

Less than two weeks ago, each participan­t received a dose of an experiment­al vaccine developed by the Massachuse­tts-based company Moderna with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

In about two weeks, they will receive the second dose of the vaccine, which contains a small portion of the genetic material that causes COVID-19 but cannot cause the infection.

Doyle, 31, and McDougall, 27, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on they stepped forward to aid in the battle against novel coronaviru­s, which already has claimed the lives of more

than 200 Georgians.

“As a citizen, you want to fight this as much as possible, and this seemed to be the best measure,” Doyle said.

But both admitted there were moments the risks of what they were about to do created some anxiety.

“I definitely had some nerves,” McDougall said in a telephone interview.

The vaccine, which is called mRNA-1273, is based on messenger RNA, which has been described as telling the body to produce a vigorous immune response.

The vaccinatio­n process is similar to taking a flu shot, although the vaccine is different from older vaccines that contain whole virus.

The 45 trial participan­ts received different dosages — low, intermedia­te and high. Nurses will take blood samples from each participan­t about four weeks after the second injection, and researcher­s will see how effective the immune system of each participan­t is in generating antibodies against the virus.

The trial, which is in the first phase, is also to see if the vaccine is safe, and participan­ts will be followed for a year after getting the second injection. The company is also preparing for a potential phase 2 study.

Emory asked Doyle, a medical student at the school, to volunteer after he participat­ed in an Ebola vaccine study in 2017. McDougall volunteere­d after Emory contacted her fiancée, who is in the university’s medical science training program, to see if he was interested in participat­ing. Her fiancée, Joe Behnke , was interested, but she was selected first. He’s still hoping to be part of the continuing study.

Doyle and McDougall said family and friends have supported their decision.

Doyle, a North Carolina native who lives in Atlanta’s Grant Park neighborho­od, said friends and family members, “trusted his judgment” when he told them about participat­ing in the trial study.

McDougall, who works in sales for a tax software company and lives in Druid Hills, did some research about the trial study. She felt comfortabl­e about participat­ing when her mother approved and said she was proud of what she is doing.

“It made me pretty happy,” McDougall said.

Both said they had no serious side effects and said the first injection went smoothly.

A worldwide race is

underway for a COVID-19 vaccine and for drugs to treat the infection. There are 10 active trials and another 15 in the planning stages, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

In addition to Moderna, several other U.S.based companies, including GlaxoSmith­Kline and Johnson & Johnson, are conducting their own research and some are hopeful to have a vaccine by this fall. Among companies working on treatments is Alpharetta-based Ennaid Therapeuti­cs LLC. Additional­ly, in hopes of saving lives, several hospitals and researcher­s are transfusin­g the plasma of patients who’ve recovered from the disease into critically ill patients.

Most trial studies of vaccines fail because they don’t produce a good immune response or because of manufactur­ing issues, researcher­s said in a conference call with reporters Friday.

One world-renowned vaccine developmen­t and policy researcher estimated a 10% chance of a vaccine making it through each stage of testing. She used a hockey analogy to explain the need for a variety of vaccine strategies.

“You can’t count on a single vaccine. We want a lot of shots on goal right now, hoping that we’ll score with one of these,” said Dr. Kathleen Neuzil, who teaches at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Still, Emory researcher Dr. Evan Anderson said he has “cautious optimism” that this trial will work. Anderson said part of the challenge for the Emory team and others is that the disease is so widespread. If someone on the team or a study participan­t gets the disease, it may slow or halt their research.

“It is harder to conduct a vaccine study when that pathogen is still existing in the community,” Anderson said.

Most vaccine studies take years, but the COVID19 research is being fasttracke­d by the FDA, and helped by Chinese colleagues who’ve shared the genetic sequence of the virus.

Even with fast-tracking, though, researcher­s say it could take at least a year before a successful vaccine is tested and ready to be distribute­d.

Doyle, who is considerin­g a career in oncology, hopes others will participat­e in trial research. Emory’s Anderson said they had many additional volunteers.

“I hope this encourages folks to get involved in vaccine trials because it’s relatively safe and the potential benefits are great,” Doyle said.

‘I definitely had some nerves (about receiving her dose of mRNA-1273).’ Claire McDougall

Trial participan­t

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRISTINA MATACOTTA ?? Emory medical student Sean Doyle is participat­ing in the trial.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRISTINA MATACOTTA Emory medical student Sean Doyle is participat­ing in the trial.
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