Medgate Today

CHINA FOCUSES ON NEXT-GENERATION INTRANASAL COVID-19 VACCINES AMID RISING MUTANT STRAINS

-

COVID-19 infections continue to rise with several countries facing second-and third-wave infections with the newly evolved mutant strains, thereby increasing the demand for effective vaccines. Several pharmaceut­ical companies across the world have started working on the inhaled vaccine formulatio­ns and China is also developing next generation intranasal COVID-19 vaccines, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

CanSino Biologics is about to start a Phase I/II trial using an inhaled COVID-19 vaccine and a Phase II trial is underway for the intranasal COVID-19 vaccine developed by the University of Hong Kong in collaborat­ion with Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy Enterprise.

According to GlobalData's ‘Coronaviru­s Disease 2019 (COVID19) Pharma Executive Briefing – April 20, 2021’, 13 COVID-19 injectable vaccines are available worldwide, and five of them are from the Chinese companies including Sinopharm Group, Sinovac Biotech, CanSino Biologics, and the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Currently, there is insufficie­nt data on whether injectable vaccines can provide complete immunity against the new strains. However, inhaled vaccines are gaining attention owing to their potential to generate both systemic immunity and local immunity at the mucosal tissues in the lungs where the virus replicates.

Venkat Kartheek Vale, Pharma Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Many countries are working to achieve herd immunity using the existing vaccines, but the emergence and rapid proliferat­ion of mutant strains has made it difficult to predict the return to normalcy. In this context, inhaled vaccines with their dual protection mechanism can relatively be better alternativ­es to injectable­s in minimizing the infection rate and preventing potential health risks.”

According to GlobalData's ‘Pharmaceut­ical Intelligen­ce Center', there are 11 inhaled vaccines undergoing clinical trials in countries including the US, the UK, China, Cuba, India and

Iran. While it is too early to comment on the efficacy of inhaled vaccines as there is a possibilit­y of developing more virulent COVID-19 strains in the future, the likelihood of inhaled vaccines uptake is expected to be high considerin­g the demand for greater immunity at the airway cells inside the lungs.

Mr. Vale concludes: “Since the efficacy rates of Chinese vaccines were found to be inferior to vaccines of PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna, inhaled vaccines with their potential to induce stronger immunity can be more beneficial. Additional­ly, factors such as being non-invasive, easy to administer without the need for trained specialist­s, and not requiring storage and transporta­tion at low temperatur­e make them also suitable for mass immunizati­on if adequately supported by manufactur­ing on a large scale.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India