Calgary Herald

THE FIRST CANADIAN CLINICAL TRIALS FOR A POSSIBLE COVID-19 VACCINE WILL BE CONDUCTED BY A HALIFAX RESEARCH TEAM THAT ALSO WAS INVOLVED IN TRIALS THAT LED TO A VACCINE FOR THE EBOLA VIRUS.

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX • The first Canadian clinical trials for a possible COVID-19 vaccine will be conducted by a Halifax research team that also was involved in trials that eventually led to a vaccine for the Ebola virus.

Health Canada has approved trials that will be conducted at the Canadian Centre for Vaccinolog­y at Dalhousie University.

The centre’s director, Dr. Scott Halperin, says the lab was one of several in Canada and the U.S. whose work starting in 2014 eventually saw an “emergency release” of an Ebola vaccine that was used in West Africa before a third phase of clinical trials had been completed.

Halperin said each lab did slightly different studies in order to get the right type of informatio­n before quickly moving to the second phase and then the third.

“The Phase 1 studies were done and within six months the data were available and the phase three studies were started in West Africa which then helped to actually stop the epidemic,” he said in an interview.

Halperin said it’s possible the same emergency release could happen in Canada with a potential COVID-19 vaccine if it shows potential and is deemed safe, expediting a process that usually takes five to seven years under normal circumstan­ces.

“That would be something that Health Canada and the Canadian government would have to decide whether they wanted to do that. But it is certainly one of the options in the tool kit of things they can do to expedite the process if this or any other vaccine is looking promising.”

Halperin pointed out that despite its early use during testing, the Ebola vaccine wasn’t actually licensed as a regular marketed vaccine until late last year.

However, he cautions there’s much work to be done before a COVID-19 vaccine could be approved for use.

The Halifax researcher­s will be following up work by Chinese manufactur­er Cansino Biologics, which is already conducting human clinical trials for the vaccine.

Halperin said the first phase trial should be underway within the next three weeks once approved by the centre’s research ethics board.

Phase 1 will involve fewer than 100 healthy volunteers between the ages of 18 and 55 who will be followed over the next six months.

“We want to make sure that the vaccine is safe first in younger individual­s before we go into people who may be at higher risk,” Halperin said.

The participan­ts will be clinically monitored through a series of blood tests. They are also asked to record their symptoms in a diary.

If the initial test group shows a safe immune response, Halperin said researcher­s will transition into an expanded second phase study before the first phase is even completed.

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