Business Standard

Trials on India’s first MRNA vaccine to begin soon

Gennova Pharma plans initial trials on 150 people

- SOHINI DAS Mumbai, 14 April

Emcure Group firm Gennova Biopharmac­euticals, which is developing India’s first mrnabased Covid-19 vaccine, is set to start recruitmen­t for phase 1 clinical trials in a week.

Vikas Thapar, president — corporate developmen­t & strategy — Emcure Group, told Business Standard that the firm was readying for clinical trials anytime now. “We got the final nod from the regulator last week to start phase 1 clinical trials. We are going to start it anytime now. The recruitmen­t will begin next week. Phase 1 would be on about 150 people,” Thapar said.

As for manufactur­ing, he said Emcure had sterile products manufactur­ing capacity. “We are tweaking part of this capacity to make the MRNA vaccine. We are also open to fill and finish opportunit­ies with partners outside Emcure,” he said.

In December, the firm had approached drug regulator Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) with details of the pre-clinical (or animal) toxicology studies.

“Some of these studies were done overseas. We were asked to conduct the studies in India also as this is a completely new technology platform for vaccines in India. We did that and again approached the regulator. We have now secured nod to start phase 1 clinical trials,” Thapar added.

He added Gennova was working on MRNA technology for oncology products. When the pandemic hit, it thought of working on a vaccine using the same technology.

Gennova’s Covid vaccine candidate HGCO19 would remain stable at 2 to 8 degree Celsius temperatur­e, unlike global peers from Pfizerbion­tech and Moderna that require sub-zero temperatur­es.

Gennova has tied up with Seattle-based HDT Biotech Corporatio­n and also received seed funding from the department of biotechnol­ogy for developing this candidate.

Only recently, the firm received a funding of around ~70 crore from the department of biotechnol­ogy for its vaccine candidate.

The firm has a planned capex of ~250 crore for facility expansion and is funding it through ~135-crore debt. The remaining will be through a government grant.

How does HGCO19 work?

The messenger RNA vaccine candidate contains a short, synthetic version, encoding the spike protein (antigen) of the novel coronaviru­s Sarscov-2. This interacts with the receptors of host cells. When the vaccine is injected into the body, the synthetic MRNA is taken to muscle cells where it instructs the cells to make numerous copies of MRNA and copies of the antigen. This primes the body’s immune system which learns to identify the coronaviru­s. It protects the body when it is attacked by the virus.

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