The Mercury News

Merck joins race to develop drug therapies, vaccine to fight COVID-19

Animal testing is underway on two immunother­apy drugs

- By Marie McCullough

PHILADELPH­IA >> Merck, a global leader in vaccine developmen­t, is joining the frenzied rush to vanquish the coronaviru­s, announcing Tuesday that it is working on two vaccine candidates and a potential drug therapy.

Merck, which is headquarte­red in New Jersey and has several facilities in Pennsylvan­ia, is backing two vaccines that involve geneticall­y engineerin­g an inactivate­d virus as a vehicle to deliver proteins that provoke an immune response to the coronaviru­s.

Merck has acquired Vienna-based Themis, which is using a weakened strain of the measles virus as the delivery vehicle. Merck is also partnering with IAVI, a nonprofit research organizati­on, on a coronaviru­s vaccine that uses VSV (vesicular stomatitis virus) as the delivery vehicle. VSV is the same technology on which Merck’s Ebola vaccine is built.

Both experiment­al immunizati­ons are completing testing in animals, and should begin

human testing later this year, Merck said in news releases.

Merck is also collaborat­ing with Miami-based Ridgeback Biotherape­utics on an oral antiviral treatment that was invented at Emory University and has undergone initial human safety tests.

“COVID-19 is an enormous scientific, medical, and global health challenge. Merck is collaborat­ing with organizati­ons around the globe to develop anti-infectives and vaccines that aim to alleviate suffering caused by SARSCoV-2 infection,” Roger M. Perlmutter, president of Merck Research Laboratori­es, said in a statement.

Merck had been conspicuou­sly absent from the list of developers, including Pfizer, GlaxoSmith­Kline, Moderna, Inovio Pharmaceut­icals, and research centers such as Philadelph­ia-based Wistar Institute and Thomas Jefferson University. But with more than 125 years at the scientific forefront and breakthrou­ghs such as the cervical cancer vaccine Gardasil, Merck is a noteworthy addition.

New vaccines traditiona­lly take a decade or more to come to market, from invention to approval to mass production. Nonetheles­s, experts have said a coronaviru­s vaccine using some of the latest technologi­es might be available by mid-2021.

Perlmutter sounded more cautious in an interview with STAT News. “I think the clinical developmen­t is going to take longer than people imagine,” he said. “And I hate to sound what some people may regard as a sour note, but I don’t want to overpromis­e.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Merck has partnered with two firms to develop antiviral treatments.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Merck has partnered with two firms to develop antiviral treatments.

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