The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

COVID-19 vaccine hunt heats up globally, still no guarantee

- By Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON » Hundreds of people are rolling up their sleeves in countries across the world to be injected with experiment­al vaccines that might stop COVID-19, spurring hope — maybe unrealisti­c — that an end to the pandemic may arrive sooner than anticipate­d.

About 100 research groups are pursuing vaccines with nearly a dozen in early stages of human trials or poised to start. It’s a crowded field, but researcher­s say that only increases the odds that a few might overcome the many obstacles that remain.

“We’re not really in a competitio­n against each other. We’re in a race against a pandemic virus, and we really need as many players in that race as possible,” Dr. Andrew Pollard, who is leading the University of Oxford’s vaccine study, told The Associated Press.

The hard truth: There’s no way to predict which — if any — vaccine will work safely, or even to name a front-runner.

As Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government’s top expert, put it: “You need more shots on goal for a chance at getting a safe and effective vaccine.”

The first cautious tests of March, when small numbers of volunteers got injections to check for side effects, have turned into larger studies in China, the U.S. and Europe to look for hints that different vaccine candidates really protect.

Next: Finding out for sure if any of the vaccines work in the real world by testing large groups of people in areas where the virus is circulatin­g — a tricky prospect when study participan­ts may be in places where the virus is fading or they are told to stay home — and finding a way to quickly distribute lots of doses of any successful candidates.

Policymake­rs are devising plans to try to overcome both obstacles in an attempt to compress the years it usually takes to develop a vaccine. Asked if a vaccine by January was possible, Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronaviru­s task force coordinato­r, told Fox News Sunday “on paper, it’s possible. It’s whether we can execute,” she said.

Fauci has cautioned that even if everything goes perfectly, 12 to 18 months to develop a vaccine would set a speed record — and January will mark a year since the National Institutes of Health began creating its own COVID-19 vaccine, now in trials with Moderna Inc.

Multiple shots work in multiple ways

Depending how you count, there are between eight and 11 vaccine candidates in early stages of testing in China, the U.S., Britain and Germany — a collaborat­ion between Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech last week began a study in Germany that’s simultaneo­usly testing four somewhat different shots. More study sites are about to open in still other countries — and between May and July another handful of different vaccines is set to begin firstin-human testing.

There’s no shortage of volunteers.

“This allows me to play a small role in fighting this thing,” said Anthony Campisi, 33, of Philadelph­ia, who received his first test dose of Inovio Pharmaceut­icals’ DNA-based vaccine at the

University of Pennsylvan­ia last month. “I can be a guinea pig.”

The initial vaccine candidates work in a variety of ways. That’s important because if one type fails, maybe another won’t.

Different types of vaccines work better in some virus families than others. But for coronaviru­ses, there’s no blueprint. Back in 2003 when scientists attempted vaccines against SARS, a cousin of the new virus, animal studies hinted at safety problems but then SARS disappeare­d and vaccine funding dried up. Vaccines against another COVID-19 cousin named MERS have only reached first-step safety testing.

“In 20/20 hindsight, we should have worked harder on coronaviru­s vaccines back then,” said Dr. Sten Vermund, dean of the Yale School of Public Health. Now, “we’re obligated to try a variety of strategies if we want fast results.”

Pros and cons

China’s Sinovac and SinoPharm are testing “inactivate­d” vaccines, made by growing the new coronaviru­s and killing it. The companies have revealed little informatio­n about how the shots differ. But the technology is tried-and-true — polio shots and some types of flu vaccine are inactivate­d virus — although it’s hard to scale up to rapidly produce millions of doses.

Most other vaccines in the pipeline aim to train the immune system to recognize a piece of the new coronaviru­s — mostly, the spiky protein that studs its outer surface.

One way: Use a harmless virus to carry the spike protein into the body. It’s easier to produce but determinin­g which virus is the best “carrier” is a key question. China’s CanSino Biologics brewed its vaccine using a common cold-causing adenovirus, engineered so it won’t spread in the body. And in case people’s immune systems fight off the cold virus before the vaccine can do its job, Pollard’s Oxford team instead chose an adenovirus that normally infects chimpanzee­s.

Another way: Inject a piece of the coronaviru­s genetic code that instructs the body itself to produce spike protein that in turn primes the immune system to attack. It’s a new and unproven technology but one that promises even faster production. Vaccines made by NIH and Moderna, Inovio Pharmaceut­icals, and that Pfizer-BioNtech collaborat­ion use genetic code approaches.

Still more methods are next in line: Vaccine made of spike protein nanopartic­les, and even a nasal spray alternativ­e to shots.

Proving they work

Most vaccine studies so far are tracking safety and whether volunteers’ blood shows any immune reactions. Some have jumped to larger numbers quickly, but there’s still concern about being able to prove real-world protection.

If study participan­ts are holed up at home or live in areas where the virus has quit spreading rapidly, then too few may get sick for scientists to tell if the vaccine or social distancing was what protected them. The Oxford study, for example, will track about 1,000 people, half given the real vaccine. But the team plans a later-stage study with another 5,000 volunteers for a final answer and knows it might have to move to other countries.

“When you’re chasing a pandemic, the place that looks like the right one to go to today will be the wrong place two weeks from now. And that makes it really difficult,” Pollard said.

In the U.S., some lawmakers have urged a different and controvers­ial experiment: Recruit young, healthy volunteers who agree to be deliberate­ly infected with the new coronaviru­s to prove if a vaccine protects them. But some healthy adults do die from COVID-19 — and until doctors better understand why, that so-called “challenge study” makes for a risky propositio­n with serious ethical questions, Yale’s Vermund noted.

The World Health Organizati­on last week called for countries to offer to be test sites for an internatio­nal project that will speed the timeline by admitting on a rolling basis promising vaccine candidates for further study in locations where COVID-19 remains widespread at the time.

In the U.S., the Trump administra­tion plans a project dubbed Operation Warp Speed that will overlap studies of “different candidates that are made differentl­y and act differentl­y,” Birx said.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD VIA AP ?? A volunteer is injected with either an experiment­al COVID-19vaccine or a comparison shot as part of the first human trials in the U.K. to test a potential vaccine April 25 led by Oxford University in England.
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD VIA AP A volunteer is injected with either an experiment­al COVID-19vaccine or a comparison shot as part of the first human trials in the U.K. to test a potential vaccine April 25 led by Oxford University in England.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States