Toronto Star

U.K. vaccine trial showing early promise

Oxford-developed shot might be ready for delivery in two months

- JAMES PATON AND STEPHANIE BAKER

A coronaviru­s vaccine the University of Oxford is developing with AstraZenec­a showed promising results in early human testing, a sign of progress in the high-stakes pursuit of a shot to defeat the pathogen.

The vaccine increased levels of both protective neutralizi­ng antibodies and immune T-cells that target the virus, according to the study organizers. The results were published Monday in the Lancet medical journal.

A positive outcome had been widely expected after reports last week lifted the stock, with the vaccine already in more advanced trials.

“We are seeing very good immune responses, not just on neutralizi­ng antibodies but of T-cells as well,” Adrian Hill, head of Oxford’s Jenner Institute, said. “We’re stimulatin­g both arms of the immune system.”

The results will be closely scrutinize­d as government­s around the world seek to end a pandemic that’s killed more than 600,000 people and triggered economic turmoil since erupting this year. Moderna, another front-runner, released results last week from an earlystage test that showed its vaccine raised levels of antibodies that fight the virus.

Although stimulatin­g production of neutralizi­ng antibodies doesn’t prove a vaccine will be effective, it’s considered an important early step in testing. Results from testing in animals had already shown the Oxford-AstraZenec as hot provoked an immune response.

Across the world, about 160 coronaviru­s vaccines are in various stages of developmen­t, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

The Oxford shot is close to the front of the pack and has already begun final-stage tests. AstraZenec­a has said it may begin delivering doses to the U.K. as early as September.

“We want other companies to have vaccines that work as well because the world will get more vaccine sooner,” Hill said. “We just feel there is an advantage of having both arms of the immune system stimulated well.”

The British drugmaker received a boost when the U.S. pledged as much as $1.2 billion (U.S.) toward developmen­t. Under its agreement with Astra, the U.S. could begin receiving supplies as early as October.

The U.K. has also struck a supply agreement for the shot, but on Monday it secured access to other drugmakers’ experiment­al vaccines to hedge its bets and garner enough doses to cover its population of 66 million. The government secured deals with Pfizer Inc., BioNTech and Valneva.

Companies and universiti­es are relying on an array of approaches in the fight against COVID-19.

The Oxford team has developed a technology that can speed up the process by using a harmless virus to carry some of the pathogen’s genetic material into cells to generate an immune response. The proposed vaccine is made from a weakened version of a common cold virus that’s geneticall­y changed to make it unable to grow in humans.

Oxford has inserted genetic material from the surface spike protein of the SARSCoV-2 virus as a way of tricking the immune system into fighting back.

The platform stimulates both antibodies and high levels of killer T-cells, a type of white blood cell that helps the immune system destroy infection.

While the test doesn’t prove the vaccine will work, “I think we’re a bit more confident it should work this week than last week,” Hill said.

Moderna’s initial results were from the first group of 45 patients who received the vaccine Moderna’s shares surged in U.S. trading after the results, despite a high rate of side effects among the patients who got the shot.

The Oxford shot elicited neutralizi­ng antibodies after a single dose, Hill said.

That may be an important advantage in quickly raising immunity.

“I don’t read that clearly in the Moderna data,” he said. “I think they need two doses to see plausibly protective neutralizi­ng antibodies.”

A large trial is set to begin this month that will test Moderna’s vaccine in a two-shot regimen. Astra will also prioritize a twoshot regimen, Hill said.

“It gives higher titres of antibodies, which is important going forward,” he said.

 ?? JOHN CAIRNS UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD PHOTOS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Blood samples from coronaviru­s vaccine trials are handled inside the Jenner Institute at Oxford.
JOHN CAIRNS UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD PHOTOS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Blood samples from coronaviru­s vaccine trials are handled inside the Jenner Institute at Oxford.
 ??  ?? Adrian Hill said the shot elicited neutralizi­ng antibodies after one dose.
Adrian Hill said the shot elicited neutralizi­ng antibodies after one dose.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada