Kuwait Times

As pressure for coronaviru­s vaccine mounts, scientists debate risks of accelerate­d testing

Testing of vaccine enhancemen­t in animals to proceed simultaneo­usly with human trials Venezuelan hospitals await coronaviru­s unprepared

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CHICAGO: Drugmakers are working as quickly as possible to develop a vaccine to combat the rapidly spreading coronaviru­s that has infected more than 100,000 people worldwide. Behind the scenes, scientists and medical experts are concerned that rushing a vaccine could end up worsening the infection in some patients rather than preventing it.

Studies have suggested that coronaviru­s vaccines carry the risk of what is known as vaccine enhancemen­t, where instead of protecting against infection, the vaccine can actually make the disease worse when a vaccinated person is infected with the virus. The mechanism that causes that risk is not fully understood and is one of the stumbling blocks that has prevented the successful developmen­t of a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Normally, researcher­s would take months to test for the possibilit­y of vaccine enhancemen­t in animals. Given the urgency to stem the spread of the new coronaviru­s, some drugmakers are moving straight into small-scale human tests, without waiting for the completion of such animal tests.

“I understand the importance of accelerati­ng timelines for vaccines in general, but from everything I know, this is not the vaccine to be doing it with,” Dr Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, told Reuters.

Hotez worked on developmen­t of a vaccine for SARS (Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome), the coronaviru­s behind a major 2003 outbreak, and found that some vaccinated animals developed more severe disease compared with unvaccinat­ed animals when they were exposed to the virus. “There is a risk of immune enhancemen­t,” said Hotez. “The way you reduce that risk is first you show it does not occur in laboratory animals.” Hotez testified last week before the US House Committee on Science, Space and Technology about the need for sustained funding for vaccine research. There remains no vaccine for any of the new coronaviru­ses that have caused outbreaks in the past 20 years.

At least for now, the world’s experts have concluded that accelerate­d testing is a risk worth taking. At a specially convened World Health Organizati­on (WHO) meeting in midFebruar­y, designed to co-ordinate a global response to the new coronaviru­s, scientists representi­ng government-funded research organizati­ons and drugmakers around the world agreed that the threat was so great that vaccine developers should move quickly into human trials, before animal testing is completed, four people who attended the meeting told Reuters.

“You want to have a vaccine as quickly as possible,” Dr Marie-Paule Kieny, former assistant director-general at the WHO, who co-chaired the meeting, told Reuters. “You have to balance this with the risk that you impose on a very small number of people, and do all you can do to mitigate this risk as much as possible.”

The conclusion of that meeting, which was not open to media, has not been officially publicized by the WHO. It does not reflect any official position adopted by the WHO, a United Nations body whose job it is to help shape global

MARACAIBO/SAN CRISTOBAL: In a hospital in Venezuela’s western city of Maracaibo, chronic water shortages have left staff using paint buckets as toilets. With medical gloves in short supply, workers use the same pair on multiple patients.

Years of recession, hyperinfla­tion, and underinves­tment in public services have left Venezuela in poor condition to confront any cases of the coronaviru­s that is spreading rapidly worldwide. Its hospitals suffer from chronic shortages of medicine and supplies, as well as frequent lapses in electricit­y and running water.

So far, Latin America has been spared the worst ravages of the virus. Around 100 cases have been reported in the region since Brazil announced the first case on Feb. 26.

But - with neighborin­g Colombia confirming its first case last week - it is only a matter of time before it reaches Venezuela, officials say.

The Pan American Health Organizati­on said last week it would be prioritizi­ng Haiti, Venezuela and a handful of other Central and South American countries who have “more challenges to their health systems.”

Hania Salazar, president of Maracaibo’s nursing school in the western state of Zulia, said hospital workers have been without supplies for years. health policy. Regulatory oversight of drugmakers and medical research is in the hands of national regulators. The most powerful of those, the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), has signaled that it is in agreement with the consensus and will not stand in the way of accelerate­d testing schedules.

“When responding to an urgent public health situation such as novel coronaviru­s, we intend to exercise regulatory flexibilit­y and consider all data relevant to a certain vaccine platform,” FDA spokeswoma­n Stephanie Caccomo said in a statement. The agency had no comment specifical­ly on animal testing for vaccine enhancemen­t.

Coronaviru­s vaccine developers are still required to conduct routine animal testing to make sure the vaccine itself is not toxic and is likely to help the immune system respond to the virus.

Seattle risk

Some 20 coronaviru­s vaccine candidates are being developed by research institutes and drugmakers including America’s Johnson & Johnson and France’s Sanofi SA. The US government has earmarked more than $3 billion for coronaviru­s treatments and vaccines.

Biotechnol­ogy company Moderna Inc, which is working with the US-funded National Institutes of Health (NIH), is the closest to human testing, announcing plans to start a trial with 45 people in Seattle this month.

Testing for the specific risk of vaccine enhancemen­t in animals will proceed simultaneo­usly with human trials, the NIH told Reuters, which it said should establish whether it is safe to expose larger numbers of people to the vaccine. Moderna did not respond to requests for comment.

The plan is consistent with the WHO consensus and FDA requiremen­ts, said Dr Emily Erbelding, director of the Division of Microbiolo­gy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the NIH. The trial is expected to take 14 months, a spokeswoma­n for the NIH said.

Dr Gregory Poland, a virologist and vaccine researcher with the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, expressed doubts about that approach. “This is important, but it has to be done in a way that reassures scientists and the public that these (vaccines) are not only efficaciou­s, but safe,” he told Reuters.

Hotez said he was surprised human trials were going ahead. “If there is immune enhancemen­t in laboratory animals vaccinated with the Moderna vaccine, that’s a showstoppe­r,” he said. US immunother­apy company Inovio Pharmaceut­icals Inc , which is developing a coronaviru­s vaccine in collaborat­ion with a Chinese company, also expects to start human clinical trials in 30 US volunteers in April rather than wait for animal studies on vaccine enhancemen­t.

“The community as a whole weighed that and said we don’t want to delay the clinical process. We’ve been encouraged to go as rapidly as possible into Phase 1 studies,” Inovio Chief Executive Joseph Kim told Reuters.

The company plans to start human safety trials shortly

Risk of immune enhancemen­t

“Workers bring their own kits with soap and towels, and their own water to drink and wash,” said Salazar.

“They also carry paint containers because here there is no hospital that has a bathroom in good condition.”

As in other parts of Venezuela, Zulia’s health system has hemorrhage­d workers. Salazar said only emergency units were operating and workers often clock upwards of 18 hours a day.

Residents say a lack of access to water or affordable soap can make basic hygiene practices - needed to guard against the spread of the virus - out of reach for many.

“I am very concerned that in Venezuela there are no supplies, medicines, or even water in hospitals or homes,” said Josefina Moreno, a 50-year-old university professor with a history of respirator­y disease. “The prevention measures that everyone is talking about are hard to comply with here.”

Gustavo Uribe, president of a medical school in the state of Tachira near the Colombian border, said handwashin­g would be difficult due to water shortages.

“We’re asking everyone to comply with hygienic norms, but we all know about the precarity of the system,” he said. “The worry is that it will come here first, being by an internatio­nal border.” Vice President Delcy Rodriguez said on state television on Monday that the country was implementi­ng “strict controls” at ports of entry and a series of protocols in health centers. The government has issued a list of hospitals charged with handling cases.

But some of those hospitals were not even open, said Douglas Leon, head of the Venezuelan Medical Federation.

“There is no hospital in Venezuela with capacity to attend to a patient with a condition as serious as this,” he told a news conference on Monday. — Reuters thereafter in China and South Korea - two countries that have been hit hard by the virus. Kim said he expects to have an answer to the question of vaccine enhancemen­t at some point this year.

The Moderna/NIH trial is enrolling patients at the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle. The choice of location, made several weeks ago, could prove to be problemati­c. To reduce the risk to volunteers, scientists at the WHO meeting recommende­d that drugmakers restrict early clinical trials to small groups of healthy people and conduct them in places where the virus is not spreading, according to Kieny, who now works at French research institute Inserm. That lowers the chances that people who get the vaccine could encounter the virus and trigger a more severe reaction.

Since the location was chosen, the Seattle metro area has emerged as the epicenter of infections in the United States. Washington state has reported 162 coronaviru­s infections and 22 deaths, out of a total of 755 infections and 26 deaths in the country as of Tuesday, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Neverthele­ss, Moderna and the NIH plan to go ahead. “We think there is no reason to have to change the site. If you change it, there might be community transmissi­on in another site over the next couple of weeks,” Erbelding said. “Any risk of that to participan­ts is very small. It would be manageable as the trial progresses. People are being observed very, very carefully.”

Early warning signs

Tragic lessons from other vaccines and prior work on coronaviru­ses have raised some warning flags for developers. The best-known example occurred in a US trial in the 1960s of a vaccine created by the NIH and licensed to Pfizer Inc to fight respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV), which causes pneumonia in infants. The vast majority of babies who received the vaccine developed more severe disease, and two toddlers died. A more recent example occurred in the Philippine­s, where some 800,000 children were vaccinated with Sanofi’s dengue vaccine, Dengvaxia. Only afterward did the company learn that it could increase the risk of more severe disease in a small percentage of individual­s.

Research, including that conducted by Hotez, has shown that coronaviru­ses in particular have the potential to produce this kind of response. But testing for the risk of vaccine enhancemen­t is time-consuming because it requires scientists to breed mice that are geneticall­y altered to respond to the virus like humans. Work on these and other animal models is just getting under way in several laboratori­es around the world.

Moderna, Inovio and several other vaccine developers are not waiting for that process to be completed and are planning to launch human trials in record time for a virus that was only discovered in December.

Both Moderna and Inovio say their vaccines are likely to have a lower risk of vaccine enhancemen­t because they are made using newer technology that focuses on specific genes on the outer ‘spike’ portion of the virus. Coronaviru­s vaccines that caused vaccine enhancemen­t were typically made using an inactivate­d version of the entire virus. Neither company has produced a licensed vaccine to date.

J&J said it is developing animal models to test for vaccine enhancemen­t and hopes to have a vaccine candidate ready for human trials in October. A Sanofi spokeswoma­n said the company will examine this risk before testing the vaccine in clinical trials.

“People know how traumatic the RSV experience was,” said Dr Johan Van Hoof, global head of Janssen Vaccines, J&J’s vaccine unit. “When you see signals in animals like this, we should not ignore them.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? NAPLES: A street seller/performer sits at his stall next to a sign reading “Only in Naples is being sold the vaccine against the coronaviru­s” on Piazza San Domenico Maggiore in Naples. — AFP
NAPLES: A street seller/performer sits at his stall next to a sign reading “Only in Naples is being sold the vaccine against the coronaviru­s” on Piazza San Domenico Maggiore in Naples. — AFP
 ??  ?? CUCUTA: File photo shows an immigratio­n officer wearing a protective face mask as a precaution­ary measure to avoid contractin­g COVID-19 (coronaviru­s) checks a woman’s temperatur­e at Francisco Paula Santander Internatio­nal Bridge, in Cucuta, Colombia, at the border with Venezuela. — AFP
CUCUTA: File photo shows an immigratio­n officer wearing a protective face mask as a precaution­ary measure to avoid contractin­g COVID-19 (coronaviru­s) checks a woman’s temperatur­e at Francisco Paula Santander Internatio­nal Bridge, in Cucuta, Colombia, at the border with Venezuela. — AFP
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