The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Billionair­e touts own vaccine ‘universal booster’

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BIOTECH billionair­e Patrick Soon-Shiong is backing a Covid-19 vaccine candidate that he sees as having potential as a universal booster of other pandemic shots.

ImmunityBi­o, of which the 68-year-old holds about 13 percent, is developing a vaccine called hAd5 that’s intended to specifical­ly activate T-cells that scientists believe are a key part of the immune response against Covid-19.

This quarter, the South African-born biotech tycoon will begin trials in the country, the scene of what he calls a Covid-19 “firestorm” as the delta variant drives a third wave of infections, the peak of which has surpassed two earlier waves.

Most vaccines work to elicit immune proteins called antibodies blocking the spike protein that the coronaviru­s uses to enter cells. Culver Citybased ImmunityBi­o is trying to raise T-cells against both the spike and another viral protein, called the nucleocaps­id, Soon-Shiong said. This could make it ideal for use as a booster for different types of vaccines, he said in an interview.

“The concern we’ve had with regard to just antibody-based vaccines is that it’s not going to be sufficient,” Soon-Shiong said. “You really need the combinatio­n of an antibody and a T-cellbased vaccine.”

Beset by the highly transmissi­ble delta variant, South Africa has been battling its most intense

Covid-19 wave. While vaccinatio­ns there have recently gathered pace, the continent is still the world’s least-vaccinated with just 1.4 percent of its 1.2 billion people fully immunised. That’s raising fears about the emergence of new, more deadly coronaviru­s variants that could undermine the efficacy of current vaccines.

T-Cells

ImmunityBi­o’s study is the first to try boosting levels of both antibodies and T-cells against the nucleocaps­id, part of the core of the virus. The company’s South Africa Sisonke T-Cell Universal Boost trial will enroll some of the 485,000 health workers who have already received Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose Covid shot. The results of vaccinatio­n with ImmunityBi­o’s shot will be compared with people who received only J&J’s, Soon-Shiong said. The company is also planning studies in the US.

The goal of the shot is to produce “potent T- cells so you can kill the factory that is making the virus,” Soon- Shiong said, and “help overcome this challenge of mutations that happens continuous­ly.”

Some scientists are concerned about the backbone of ImmunityBi­o’s shot, called Ad5, which was used in a failed Merck & Co. HIV vaccine trial years ago.

In that trial, people who received the vaccine were more likely to contract HIV than those who didn’t, a finding that some researcher­s tracked back to the a virus used in the shot.

Those findings weren’t conclusive, SoonShiong said and he is confident that the ImmunityBi­o shot is safe.

Many methods

The company is looking at four possible ways of giving its vaccine: single-dose injection, droplets placed under the tongue, a capsule and a nasal spray. Trial volunteers who get a shot may be able to follow that with the spray, which would ease the challenge of distributi­ng doses in developing countries, Soon-Shiong said. A spray may also raise immune cells in tissue called mucosa that lines the airway tissues, which could reduce spread in the virus the respirator­y tract, he said.

Results from the company’s one US study shows that ImmunityBi­o’s candidate generates T-cell responses equal to those in people that have previously had a Covid-19 infection. While it’s been effective against some other variants, it’s still being tested against delta.

Soon-Shiong is in talks with Cape Town’s Biovac Institute as well as other companies to develop vaccine production facilities in South Africa.

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