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COVID-19 vaccine protects monkeys from new coronavirus, Chinese biotech reports

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https://www.sciencemag.org/news/202...nkeys-new-coronavirus-chinese-biotech-reports

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Sinovac Biotech has created a new COVID-19 vaccine by growing the novel coronavirus in the VERO monkey cell line and inactivating it with chemicals.

XINHUA/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO
COVID-19 vaccine protects monkeys from new coronavirus, Chinese biotech reports
By Jon CohenApr. 23, 2020 , 1:05 PM

Science’s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center.

For the first time, one of the many COVID-19 vaccines in development has protected an animal, rhesus macaques, from infection by the new coronavirus, scientists report. The vaccine, an old-fashioned formulation consisting of a chemically inactivated version of the virus, produced no obvious side effects in the monkeys, and human trials began on 16 April.

Researchers from Sinovac Biotech, a privately held Beijing-based company, gave two different doses of their COVID-19 vaccine to a total of eight rhesus macaques. Three weeks later, the group introduced SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, into the monkeys’ lungs through tubes down their tracheas, and none developed a full-blown infection.

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  • The monkeys given the highest dose of vaccine had the best response: Seven days after the animals received the virus, researchers could not detect it in the pharynx or lungs of any of them. Some of the lower dosed animals had a “viral blip” but also appeared to have controlled the infection, the Sinovac team reports in a paper published on 19 April on the preprint server bioRxiv.

  • In contrast, four control animals developed high levels of viral RNA in several body parts and severe pneumonia. The results “give us a lot of confidence” that the vaccine will work in humans, says Meng Weining, Sinovac’s senior director for overseas regulatory affairs.

“I like it,” says Florian Krammer, a virologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai who has co-authored a status report about the many different COVID-19 vaccines in development. “This is old school but it might work. What I like most is that many vaccine producers, also in lower–middle-income countries, could make such a vaccine.”

But Douglas Reed of the University of Pittsburgh, who is developing and testing COVID-19 vaccines in monkey studies, says the number of animals was too small to yield statistically significant results. His team also has a manuscript in preparation that raises concerns about the way the Sinovac team grew the stock of novel coronavirus used to challenge the animals: It may have caused changes that make it less reflective of the ones that infect humans.

Another concern is that monkeys do not develop the most severe symptoms that SARS-CoV-2 causes in humans. The Sinovac researchers acknowledge in the paper that “It’s still too early to define the best animal model for studying SARS-CoV-2,” but noted that unvaccinated rhesus macaques given the virus “mimic COVID-19-like symptoms.”

The study also addressed worries that partial protection could be dangerous. Earlier animal experiments with vaccines against the related coronaviruses that cause severe acute respiratory syndrome and Middle East respiratory syndrome had found that low antibody levels could lead to aberrant immune responses when an animal was given the pathogens, enhancing the infection and causing pathology in their lungs. But the Sinovac team did not find any evidence of lung damage in vaccinated animals who produced relatively low levels of antibodies, which “lessens the concern about vaccine enhancement,” Reed says. “More work needs to be done though.”

SARS-CoV-2 seems to accumulate mutations slowly; even so, variants might pose a challenge for a vaccine. In test tube experiments, the Sinovac researchers mixed antibodies taken from monkeys, rats, and mice given their vaccine with strains of the virus isolated from COVID-19 patients in China, Italy, Switzerland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The antibodies potently “neutralized” all the strains, which are “widely scattered on the phylogenic tree,” the researchers noted.

“This provides strong evidence that the virus is not mutating in a way that would make it resistant to a #COVID19 vaccine,” tweeted immunologist Mark Slifka of Oregon Health & Science University. “Good to know.”

Sinovac is an experienced vaccinemaker—it has marketed inactivated viral vaccines for hand, foot, and mouth disease; hepatitis A and B; and H5N1 influenza or bird flu. But Meng says it could produce, at most, about 100 million doses of the vaccine and might need to partner with other makers if the company’s COVID-19 vaccine proves safe and effective in human trials.

The company recently started phase I clinical trials in Jiangsu province, north of Shanghai, which aim to gauge safety and immune responses in 144 volunteers. An equal number of participants will receive the high and low doses or a placebo. Although placebos are not typically used in phase I studies—which do not assess efficacy—Meng says this can help better evaluate whether the vaccine causes any dangerous side effects. The company hopes to start phase II studies by mid-May that have the same design but enroll more than 1000 people, with results due by the end of June.

If all goes well, Meng says, Sinovac will seek to launch traditional phase III efficacy trials that compare the vaccine with a placebo in thousands of people. The company has also discussed joining international vaccine trials being organized by the World Health Organization (WHO). Given the low level of transmission now occurring in China, the company is considering still more efficacy trials in other countries being hit harder by the virus. “We can’t put all our eggs in one basket,” Meng says.

To quickly obtain more efficacy data after the phase I and II trials and potentially help people, Meng says Sinovac may ask regulatory agencies in China and other countries for emergency authorization to give the vaccine to those at high risk of becoming infected, such as customs agents and police officers who do not typically wear the protective gear used by health care workers. The Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2018 began to widely use an experimental Ebola vaccine under that status and the evidence suggests it powerfully helped curb that epidemic. (That Ebola vaccine first received regulatory approval in November 2019.)

According to WHO, six other vaccines had entered human trials as of 23 April, and 77 others were in development. The vast majority of these vaccines use the modern tools of genetic engineering—only four rely on the old-fashioned inactivation technology—but Meng says what ultimately matters is whether a vaccine is safe and effective, not how it’s made. “We are not comparing ourselves to anyone,” Meng says. “In this pandemic situation, the most important thing is to make a vaccine, no matter what kind of vaccine it is, that’s safe and effective as soon as possible.”

Posted in:
doi:10.1126/science.abc4050
 
This is good news.

I watch the Contagion movie, a doctor, once she found out that the vaccine is working on the monkey, she injects it to herself and then her father.

Saves the world.
 
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Actually they are month behind the UK Oxford team
who did this one month earlier in March.
 
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Just fkin tests on human speed up the whole process of it works on human similarly then make it available for human asap
World can't wait for two years for phase 1 2 and 3
 
Yeah, I got my dates wrong.

Anyway hope both succeed and some of the others.

The more successful vaccines the better.
For now, the Chinese team is little ahead of others. It is probably because Dr. Shi has been doing researches on the virus since the appearance of SARS disease (2008?). Trials with monkeys are a success, but the experts are not satisfied with only 8 monkeys. So, the Chinese team is supposed to carry out many more trials on monkeys after which trials will be conducted on human volunteers. Wish the team a success.

I think it is WHO who has the final authority to decide on which of the vaccines will be practically used. Many experiments and trials are going on throughout the industrial world and hopefully one or two effective vaccines including a Oxford one will be developed. The situation now still remains dreadful.

@casual
 
For now, the Chinese team is little ahead of others. It is probably because Dr. Shi has been doing researches on the virus since the appearance of SARS disease (2008?). Trials with monkeys are a success, but the experts are not satisfied with only 8 monkeys. So, the Chinese team is supposed to carry out many more trials on monkeys after which trials will be conducted on human volunteers. Wish the team a success.

I think it is WHO who has the final authority to decide on which of the vaccines will be practically used. Many experiments and trials are going on throughout the industrial world and hopefully one or two effective vaccines including a Oxford one will be developed. The situation now still remains dreadful.

@casual

Both these vaccines are now in the human trial phase.

The Oxford one protected six vaccinated monkeys from contracting the virus and now being tested on 500 human volunteers.

Another 500 people will not be given the vaccine and if at least some of them catch the virus and none of the vaccinated ones do, then the vaccine will be one step closer to being called effective.

Results of the Oxford human trial should be available middle of next month.
 
Both these vaccines are now in the human trial phase.

The Oxford one protected six vaccinated monkeys from contracting the virus and now being tested on 500 human volunteers.

Another 500 people will not be given the vaccine and if at least some of them catch the virus and none of the vaccinated ones do, then the vaccine will be one step closer to being called effective.

Results of the Oxford human trial should be available middle of next month.
Next month as in middle of June or middle of May?
 
Serum institute of india has already started the Mass production of the Oxford vaccines so as to save on time. So basically India is the only country that has started the Mass production of vaccines. So once again after HCQ world will be lined up for vaccines with India.
 
Serum institute of india has already started the Mass production of the Oxford vaccines so as to save on time. So basically India is the only country that has started the Mass production of vaccines. So once again after HCQ world will be lined up for vaccines with India.
We can see how Indian mind works? Oxford and others are in a stage of trial and error on monkeys and then on humans. But, Indians are taking unnecessary risks before the vaccine is proved 100% safe. Have your fellows done with trial and error? So, please send us the results.

Indians are very cheap and feeble-minded trying to hijack others tireless efforts and becoming the Champion.
@UKBengali, @casual
 
How much time might it take to make a vaccine and make this economic depression go away??

Kitna time lage ga bhai??
 
We can see how Indian mind works? Oxford and others are in a stage of trial and error on monkeys and then on humans. But, Indians are taking unnecessary risks before the vaccine is proved 100% safe. Have your fellows done with trial and error? So, please send us the results.

Indians are very cheap and feeble-minded trying to hijack others tireless efforts and becoming the Champion.
@UKBengali, @casual
See your low iq is keeping you away from gathering and processing the information.
I said serum is mass manufacturing it to save on time, I never said we have started using it on masses. Serum is using it's own millions of dollars to produce these vaccines. If in trials these fails it's our loss of Investment. If trials succeed then all good and serum would be ready with stocks. So basically it's our money we are risking, because in current scenario time is more precious than money.
Further more serum is planning to price it just 1000 rs for whole mankind can afford it and benefit from it. This is anyway biggest vaccine manufacturer in the world.
 
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No wonder, Indian idiots in old time wrote Ramayana before even Ram was born. Indians in the 20th century found that Prince Ram was not born in the Royal Palace, but in a jungle where they now built a Ram Mandir.

India remains in the Vedic age. An intelligent group of people follow the appropriate sequence.
I have some very rude questions regarding your religion too, but I will not venture into it coz there is a difference how my parents raised me and yours did, and that should show .
@waz please take care of this troll who is trying to flame a religious war
 

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