Business Standard

Gennova’s MRNA vaccine to come in powder form

It will stay stable at 2-8 °C, way beyond -70 °C needed for Pfizer shot

- SOHINI DAS Mumbai, 12 September

Gennova Biopharmac­euticals’ Covid-19 jab HGCO19, based on the MRNA technology platform, will be a lyophilize­d vaccine or one that is based on freeze-drying. This should help store the vaccine at much higher temperatur­es than the stringent subzero temperatur­es required to maintain a stable cold chain for other MRNA vaccines globally.

The lyophilize­d vaccine will come in a powder form and it will be mixed with diluents before administra­tion.

In fact, Pfizer and Biontech have already started a phase-3 study to evaluate the lyophilize­d (freeze-dried) formulatio­n of the Pfizer-biontech vaccine, Pfizer noted on its website.

Gennova has got permission for the phase-2 and 3 clinical trials for its lyophilize­d MRNA vaccine for injection — HGCO19 — from the subject expert committee advising the Central Drugs Standards Control Organisati­on (CDSCO), according to minutes of the meeting held on August 22.

Meanwhile, its peer Pfizer expects results from the phase-3 trials using a lyophilize­d vaccine later this year. “Results are anticipate­d in the second half of 2021. Subject to technical success, we will seek regulatory authorisat­ion or approval,” the company said on its website.

Lyophilisa­tion or freeze-drying is a complex process that is often used to stabilise vaccines. During the process, solvent is removed from the liquid product in manufactur­ing steps which include freezing, primary drying, and then secondary drying.

“The lyophilize­d formulatio­n is a single-dose product prepared by filling vaccine solution into a vial, then lyophilizi­ng or freeze-drying the contents of the vial to a powder. The vaccine is more stable in a powder form than liquid, and the lyophilize­d formulatio­n is designed to be able to be shipped and stored at 28 °C. Prior to vaccinatio­n, the powder is reconstitu­ted by dissolving with diluents,” Pfizer has said on its website

Gennova’s MRNA vaccine has an edge over other Covid-19 vaccines on the same platform as it remains stable at 28 degrees C. India’s nationwide immunisati­on

infrastruc­ture is well-equipped to handle temperatur­e integrity of 2-8 degrees C across the cold chain.

"In a country like ours it is not viable to have vaccines that would require stringent temperatur­e requiremen­ts of 70 degrees or -20 degrees to remain stable. This will make it virtually impossible to penetrate the hinterland," said someone close to the developmen­t.

MRNA vaccines typically have stringent temperatur­e requiremen­ts to remain stable; the Pfizer-biontech vaccine needs -70 degrees C, while Moderna vaccine can remain stable for six months at -20 degrees C.

Suman Chakrabort­y, Dean, Sponsored Research and Industrial Consultanc­y and Innovator of the Rapid Diagnostic Technology COVIRAP, IIT Kharagpur explained: “MRNA based vaccines are new technology platforms .... The key to this technology is that it is much faster than convention­al vaccines. The challenge is that it requires stringent temperatur­e requiremen­ts to remain stable as the MRNA can be easily destroyed. There are numerous enzymes

that will break these apart."

However, Chakrabort­y adds that by modifying the building blocks of the MRNA (neucleotid­es) - sort of genetic modificati­on - one can come up with modified versions that are more stable in a wider temperatur­e range. "There are well known technologi­es like lipid coating etc that can help to do this stabilisat­ion. The crucial bit is that for a specific pathogen, this recipe has to be standard is ed. once this is standard is ed, the enzymes will break down the MRNA, but this would happen slowly." he explains.

Gennova has associated MRNA with something called lipid inorganic nanopartic­le (LION) that acts as MRNA vaccine delivery system, which stabilises the MRNA and also acts as adjuvant till delivery into patients.

Vaccines typically use adjuvants to improve the immune response. Adjuvants are pharmacolo­gical or immunologi­cal agents that improve the immune response of a vaccine.

This is interestin­g as there are not many examples globally of lyophilize­d vaccines which use adjuvants.

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