The Cairns Post

Human trials of vaccine set to go

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THE first Australian human trials of a coronaviru­s vaccine are about to kick off with more than 100 volunteers.

The trials, which are being overseen by US biotechnol­ogy company Novavax, will take place in Melbourne and Brisbane with 131 healthy adults aged between 18 and 59 years.

Infectious diseases expert Dr Paul Griffin from Brisbane’s Mater Health Services is one of the researcher­s overseeing the phase one clinical trials, which are the first step in human testing.

“It is very exciting,” he told Nine’s Today show yesterday.

“Healthy volunteers will receive this vaccine for the first time and it’s predominan­tly about safety.

“So we will carefully monitor them throughout.”

Apart from safety, the trials will give researcher­s initial clues about the effectiven­ess of the vaccine developed by Novavax.

Novavax expects to have some results to share in July that could pave the way for phase two trials to look at the impact on people with coronaviru­s and side effects.

“We are, in parallel, making doses – making vaccines – in anticipati­on that we’ll be able to show it’s working and be able to start deploying it by the end of this year,” Novavax research head Dr Gregory Glenn told a virtual press conference in Melbourne from Novavax’s headquarte­rs in Maryland.

The Novavax trial involves a “recombinan­t” vaccine created by using genetic engineerin­g to grow harmless copies of the coronaviru­s spike protein in giant vats of insect cells in a laboratory.

Scientists extract and purify the protein and package it into virus-sized nanopartic­les.

“So it is something almost the same as the surface of the virus but doesn’t contain any live virus,” Dr Griffin said.

“We hope that will then give these volunteers and

HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS WILL RECEIVE THIS VACCINE FOR THE FIRST TIME AND IT’S PREDOMINAN­TLY ABOUT SAFETY

DR PAUL GRIFFIN

people that receive this vaccine an immune response that will then protect them from this infection.”

It’s the same process Novavax used to create a nanopartic­le flu vaccine that recently passed late-stage testing.

“Potentiall­y, by the end of the year, there will be a significan­t number of doses available,” Dr Griffin said.

About a dozen experiment­al vaccines are in the early stages of testing, or due to start, in China, the US and Europe.

As of yesterday, Australia had just over 7000 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s with 6532 recovered while 102 people have died from the illness.

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