J&J
to start mid-stage coronavirus vaccine trials in three
European countries next week
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[August 28, 2020]
By Nathan Allen
MADRID (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson's <JNJ.N>
Janssen unit will begin mid-stage trials for its coronavirus vaccine in
Spain, the Netherlands and Germany next week, Spain's health minister
said on Friday, as the U.S. drugmaker expands testing for its
experimental shot.
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The Phase II trial will last two months and include 550 participants
across the three countries, including 190 people in Spain, Salvador
Illa told a news conference in Madrid.
"It's a vote of confidence in our health system," Illa said, adding
it was the first human trial for a coronavirus vaccine to be
approved in Spain. The study will focus on healthy people between
the ages of 18 and 55 as well as people over 65.
Spain, which has western Europe's highest tally of coronavirus
cases, is also working with AstraZeneca <AZN.L> via the European
Union's vaccine procurement programme to secure sufficient doses.
J&J's website says if the latest trials are successful, it will
begin final Phase III studies, in which even more volunteers will
receive the experimental vaccine.
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More than 150 potential vaccines are being developed and tested globally to
combat the COVID-19 pandemic, with 30 in human trials. There is so far no
approved vaccine, except one authorised in Russia before large-scale trials.
J&J is carrying out tests in the United States and Belgium, and earlier this
week added Chile, Argentina and Peru to the list of Latin American nations where
it plans to conduct Phase III trials on 60,000 volunteers, in a study that will
also cover Brazil, Colombia and Mexico.
The company's potential vaccine uses "viral vectors" to generate immune
responses, similar to the approach taken by Oxford university and AstraZeneca in
their experimental vaccine, as well as China's CanSino.
(Reporting by Nathan Allen and Jose Elías Rodríguez; Editing by Belén Carreño
and Mark Potter)
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