The Columbus Dispatch

UK coronaviru­s vaccine prompts immune response in early test

- Maria Cheng

LONDON — Scientists at Oxford University say their experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccine has been shown in an early trial to prompt a protective immune response in hundreds of people who got the shot.

British researcher­s first began testing the vaccine in April in about 1,000 people, half of whom got the experiment­al vaccine. Such early trials are designed to evaluate safety and see what kind of immune response was provoked, but can’t tell if the vaccine truly protects.

In research published Monday in the journal Lancet, scientists said that they found their experiment­al COVID-19 vaccine produced a dual immune response in people aged 18 to 55 that lasted at least two months after they were immunized.

“We are seeing good immune response in almost everybody,” said Dr. Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute at Oxford University. “What this vaccine does particular­ly well is trigger both arms of the immune system,” he said.

Hill said that neutralizi­ng antibodies are produced — molecules which are key to blocking infection. In addition, the vaccine also causes a reaction in the body’s T-cells, which help by destroying cells that have been taken over by the virus.

The experiment­al COVID-19 vaccine caused minor side effects like fever, chills and muscle pain more often than in those who got a control meningitis vaccine.

Hill said that larger trials evaluating the vaccine’s effectiven­ess, involving about 10,000 people in the U.K. as well as participan­ts in South Africa and Brazil are still underway. Another trial is slated to start in the U.S. soon, aiming to enroll about 30,000 people.

How quickly scientists are able to determine the vaccine’s effectiven­ess will depend largely on how much more transmissi­on there is, but Hill estimated that if there were enough data to prove the vaccine’s efficacy, immunizati­on of some high-risk groups in Britain could begin in December.

He said the vaccine seemed to produce a comparable level of antibodies to those produced by people who recovered from a COVID-19 infection and hoped that the T-cell response would provide even more protection.

“There’s increasing evidence that having a T-cell response as well as antibodies could be very important in controllin­g COVID-19,” Hill said. He suggested the immune response might be boosted after a second dose; in a small number of people, their trial tested two doses administer­ed about four weeks apart.

Hill said Oxford’s vaccine is designed to reduce disease and transmissi­on. It uses a harmless virus — a chimpanzee cold virus, engineered so it can’t spread — to carry the coronaviru­s’ spike protein into the body, which should trigger an immune response.

Hill said Oxford has partnered with drugmaker Astrazenec­a to produce their vaccine globally, and that the company has already committed to making 2 billion doses.

“Even 2 billion doses may not be enough,” he said, pointing to the ongoing surge of infections worldwide. “I think its going to be very difficult to control this pandemic without a vaccine.”

Hill said researcher­s were also considerin­g conducting a “challenge” trial by the end of 2020, an ethically controvers­ial test where participan­ts would be deliberate­ly infected with COVID-19 after being immunized to see if the vaccine is effective.

“This has been done before in 19 different infectious diseases to develop vaccines and drugs and is likely to happen for COVID-19 as well,” he said.

Numerous countries including Germany, France, the Netherland­s, Italy, U.S. and the U.K. have all signed deals to receive hundreds of millions of doses of the Oxford vaccine — which has not yet been licensed — with the first deliveries scheduled for the fall.

Chinese researcher­s also published a study on their experiment­al COVID-19 vaccine in the Lancet on Monday, using a similar technique as the Oxford scientists. They reported that in their study of about 500 people, an immune response was detected in those who were immunized, although they couldn’t tell if people were protected from the disease because they weren’t exposed to COVID-19 afterwards.

Cansino Biologics’ vaccine is made similarly to Oxford’s except the Chinese shot is made with a human cold virus, and the study showed people whose bodies recognized it didn’t get as much of the presumed COVID-19 benefit. Still, China’s government already gave special approval for the military to use Cansino’s vaccine while it explores final-stage studies.

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