The Columbus Dispatch

Army testing vaccine as universal booster shot

Shots could work with existing vaccines or stand alone

- Michael Wilner

WASHINGTON – Army scientists are testing whether their new COVID-19 vaccine candidate, which entered human trials last week, can serve as a universal booster shot for all other available coronaviru­s vaccines.

Nearly 20% of Americans have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 using one of three authorized vaccines.

But with public health experts and government officials anticipati­ng the need for booster shots down the line, scientists at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research are examining whether their vaccine candidate can “mix and match” with the others to enhance and prolong protection.

The Walter Reed vaccine – called SPFN – might boost the duration and breadth of immune responses in combinatio­n with other vaccines, which are made using different technologi­es, Dr. Kayvon Modjarrad, director of Walter Reed’s Emerging Infectious Diseases Branch, said Thursday in an interview with Mcclatchy.

“This is something that we actually started planning before the whole field started looking at this, but the rest of the field of SARS-COV-2 vaccine developmen­t is now coming to look at these issues as well,” Modjarrad said, using the technical term for the novel coronaviru­s.

“We think this vaccine also has utility as a booster for another type of vaccine, in addition to its role as a stand-alone vaccine,” he said, referring to the Walter Reed vaccine candidate.

Mixing and matching different vaccines has been an area of “intense investigat­ion” for vaccine researcher­s over many years, Modjarrad added. But it has never been implemente­d before.

Two COVID-19 vaccines authorized by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for emergency use – produced by Pfizerbiontec­h and Moderna – use messenger RNA technology, known as MRNA, which teaches human cells how to make proteins that trigger an immune response.

A third Fda-authorized vaccine for emergency use, produced by Johnson & Johnson, uses viral vector technology with which a harmless virus becomes a courier to provide cells with instructio­ns to prepare an immune response. Astrazenec­a, which also uses that technology, has submitted data on its vaccine to the FDA for review.

The Water Reed vaccine differs from those vaccines. It injects ready-made, multifacet­ed proteins into the body that may be able to prepare the immune system for different variants and strains of coronaviru­ses at once.

“When you look to other fields, like HIV or influenza, we’ve learned a lot from the research on those viruses,” Modjarrad said.

“And what we’ve seen is that when you start with a vaccine that is like a genetic vaccine – DNA, MRNA – or a virus vector, and then you come in and you boost with a protein, you get a stronger response, a longer response and a broader response, rather than coming in with the same platform,” he said.

After months of studying their vaccine candidate in animals, Walter Reed scientists began their clinical trial in humans on Tuesday. Four volunteers were injected with the vaccine in the first two days. After initial observatio­n of these individual­s, the first phase of the trial will expand to 72 people, and initial results are expected by mid-summer.

Modjarrad’s team designed SPFN to be a highly adaptable vaccine that can address multiple variants of the coronaviru­s in a single shot, and potentiall­y provide protection against past and future coronaviru­ses.

The Army lab, at the same time, is researchin­g whether its vaccine candidate can be used as a stand-alone vaccine and a booster, Modjarrad said.

“Speed is everything, so everything is being done in parallel,” he said. “We’re addressing the questions of this vaccine being used as a booster at the same time that we’re addressing the question of this vaccine being used on its own.”

Modjarrad has briefed Defense Department leadership and the federal COVID-19 response team on the vaccine’s profile for safety and effectiveness based on animal trials. They have expressed eagerness for the future findings from human trials, he said.

“I think this is a great week for us, but also for the U.S. military and global health, because this vaccine is not a repetition of other vaccines. We have always been positionin­g this vaccine to be a next-generation product that is thinking toward the future,” Modjarrad said. “This is what we’ve been working towards for the past year.”

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP ?? Motorists wait to receive a COVID-19 vaccine at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. A vaccine being tested by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research might serve as a booster regardless of which vaccine a recipient gets.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP Motorists wait to receive a COVID-19 vaccine at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. A vaccine being tested by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research might serve as a booster regardless of which vaccine a recipient gets.

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