Qatar Tribune

Britain to intentiona­lly infect people with coronaviru­s in first such study

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IN order to gain a better understand­ing of the coronaviru­s, a British study will intentiona­lly infect participan­ts with the pathogen, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy announced on Wednesday.

The study would be the world’s first “human challenge” study on the novel coronaviru­s, it said.

Up to 90 volunteers between the ages of 18 and 30 “will be exposed to COVID-19 in a safe and controlled environmen­t to increase understand­ing of how the virus affects people,” it said in a statement.

The participan­ts would not be vaccinated beforehand, a ministry spokespers­on said upon request.

“Human challenge” trials, in which healthy people are exposed to a pathogen, have been used in the past, for example, in the developmen­t of flu or malaria vaccines.

The ministry particular­ly encouraged young and healthy people to sign up for the project, which is set to start in the coming weeks, after it received approval from Britain’s clinical trials ethics body.

“The safety of volunteers is paramount, which means this virus characteri­sation study will initially use the version of the virus that has been circulatin­g in the UK since March 2020 and has been shown to be of low risk in young healthy adults,” the statement said.

Participan­ts would be monitored by doctors and researcher­s 24 hours a day and receive a compensati­on.

The aim of the study is to find out how the immune system responds to the virus and identify factors that influence how an infected person transmits the virus.

The results will play a key role in the developmen­t of vaccines, the statement said, adding that in follow-up studies, participan­ts could be exposed to the virus after being vaccinated with a new substance.

This approach to testing vaccines has the advantage that efficacy can be tested comparativ­ely efficientl­y. The usual procedure, on the other hand, involves vaccinatin­g tens of thousands of people and compare infection rates with an unvaccinat­ed control group.

However, “human challenge” studies are controvers­ial. The German Associatio­n of Research-Based Pharmaceut­ical Companies (vfa), for example, had rejected such tests as unethical in the fall.

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