Los Angeles Times

El Segundo firm to begin trials for coronaviru­s vaccine

ImmunityBi­o is first L. A.- area lab to get FDA approval for preliminar­y testing.

- By Thomas Curwen

ImmunityBi­o, an El Segundo biotech company headed by Dr. Patrick SoonShiong, said Thursday it had received approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion to begin preliminar­y testing of the company’s COVID- 19 vaccine candidate.

Hoag Hospital Newport Beach will start recruiting 35 adult volunteers this month for the Phase 1 trial, which is designed to monitor the safety and possible side effects of the vaccine. Dosages will vary per candidate and be administer­ed in two shots three weeks apart, the company said in a news release.

An estimated 213 laboratori­es around the world are trying to develop a vaccine, and three dozen have advanced to human trials, according to tracking by

the Milken Institute. ImmunityBi­o is the f irst company headquarte­red in the Los Angeles area to reach this milestone. Soon- Shiong, the company’s chairman and chief executive, also owns the Los Angeles Times.

In an interview, SoonShiong called the FDA’s approval “extraordin­ary” and credited the role genetic sequencing has played in advancing vaccine research during the pandemic.

“From the time the Chi

nese put out the genetic sequence of the virus, scientists had the ability to work with it,” he said.

Phase 1, typically lasting about two months, is the earliest point at which humans are injected with vaccine candidates.

If the FDA allows ImmunityBi­o to proceed to Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials with increasing numbers of participan­ts, the company may begin to get a signal as to whether the vaccine is effective. Soon- Shiong said he hoped to begin Phase 2 — or a combined Phase 2 and 3 — by the first quarter of 2021.

Nine vaccines are in Phase 3 trials around the world with tens of thousands of participan­ts, according to the Milken tracker.

AstraZenec­a and Johnson & Johnson, which are using a platform for their vaccines similar to ImmunityBi­o’s, recently paused their Phase 3 trials after volunteers came down with unexplaine­d illnesses.

“The fact that there are so many scientists around the world working on vaccines and have found vaccine candidates that are plausible and getting into clinical trials is very exciting,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University and medical director at the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

“Getting a vaccine ready will not be a straight- line affair,” he said. “We need lots of shots on target, and we should be pleased if there were any number of vaccines being successful because we have the world’s population to vaccinate.”

ImmunityBi­o’s announceme­nt comes as infection rates are rising in the Midwest and epidemiolo­gists are warning about a second wave of infections this winter. Since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the f irst case of the novel coronaviru­s in Washington state in January, nearly 218,000 Americans have died of the disease.

The vaccine, called hAd5, relies on a geneticall­y engineered adenovirus to deliver two proteins of the novel coronaviru­s into the body, triggering an immune response that can protect against future infections.

Although other companies are also using the adenovirus, most are delivering only one component of the novel coronaviru­s: the S, or spike protein.

But the challenge presented by the adenovirus, Soon- Shiong said, is that it is a common cold virus, and many people have already developed antibodies against it. Those antibodies would attack the adenovirus before the immune system had an opportunit­y to develop a response.

But by delivering not just the S protein, which studs the outside of the coronaviru­s, but also an additional protein from inside the virus, ImmunityBi­o believes that its vaccine candidate will provide longer- lasting immunity.

“While there are a number of vaccine candidates in developmen­t, we believe most are limited by their sole focus on antibody responses to the monovalent spike protein, which may be insufficie­nt to activate the full potential of the immune system to f ight the coronaviru­s,” Soon- Shiong said in a statement.

ImmunityBi­o had been researchin­g the adenovirus in the course of developing cancer treatments when the pandemic started. The privately held company is sharing the cost of developmen­t, manufactur­ing and marketing with its publicly traded affiliate, NantKwest, of which Soon- Shiong also serves as chairman and chief executive.

 ?? Chad Terhune Los Angeles Times ?? WITH FDA approval, ImmunityBi­o will begin its Phase 1 trial involving 35 adult volunteers this month.
Chad Terhune Los Angeles Times WITH FDA approval, ImmunityBi­o will begin its Phase 1 trial involving 35 adult volunteers this month.

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