CanSino Biologics' vaccine, approved for military use in China, is a
modified form of adenovirus type 5, or Ad5. The company is in talks
to get emergency approval in several countries before completing
large-scale trials, the Wall Street Journal reported last week.
A vaccine developed by Moscow's Gamaleya Institute, approved in
Russia earlier this month despite limited testing, is based on Ad5
and a second less common adenovirus.
"The Ad5 concerns me just because a lot of people have immunity,"
said Anna Durbin, a vaccine researcher at Johns Hopkins University.
"I'm not sure what their strategy is ... maybe it won't have 70%
efficacy. It might have 40% efficacy, and that's better than
nothing, until something else comes along."
Vaccines are seen as essential to ending the pandemic that has
claimed over 845,000 lives worldwide. Gamaleya has said its
two-virus approach will address Ad5 immunity issues.
Both developers have years of experience and approved Ebola vaccines
based on Ad5. Neither CanSino nor Gamaleya responded to requests for
comment.
Researchers have experimented with Ad5-based vaccines against a
variety of infections for decades, but none are widely used. They
employ harmless viruses as "vectors" to ferry genes from the target
virus – in this case the novel coronavirus - into human cells,
prompting an immune response to fight the actual virus.
But many people already have antibodies against Ad5, which could
cause the immune system to attack the vector instead of responding
to the coronavirus, making these vaccines less effective.
Several researchers have chosen alternative adenoviruses or delivery
mechanisms. Oxford University and AstraZeneca based their COVID-19
vaccine on a chimpanzee adenovirus, avoiding the Ad5 issue. Johnson
& Johnson's candidate uses Ad26, a comparatively rare strain.
Dr. Zhou Xing, from Canada's McMaster University, worked with
CanSino on its first Ad5-based vaccine, for tuberculosis, in 2011.
His team is developing an inhaled Ad5 COVID-19 vaccine, theorizing
it could circumvent pre-existing immunity issues.
"The Oxford vaccine candidate has quite an advantage" over the
injected CanSino vaccine, he said.
Xing also worries that high doses of the Ad5 vector in the CanSino
vaccine could induce fever, fueling vaccine skepticism.
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"I think they will get good immunity in people that don't have antibodies to the
vaccine, but a lot of people do," said Dr. Hildegund Ertl, director of the
Wistar Institute Vaccine Center in Philadelphia.
In China and the United States, about 40% of people have high levels of
antibodies from prior Ad5 exposure. In Africa, it could be has high as 80%,
experts said.
HIV RISK
Some scientists also worry an Ad5-based vaccine could increase chances of
contracting HIV.
In a 2004 trial of a Merck & Co Ad5-based HIV vaccine, people with pre-existing
immunity became more, not less, susceptible to the virus that causes AIDS.
Researchers, including top U.S. infectious diseases expert Dr. Anthony Fauci, in
a 2015 paper, said the side effect was likely unique to HIV vaccines. But they
cautioned that HIV incidence should be monitored during and after trials of all
Ad5-based vaccines in at-risk populations.
"I would be worried about the use of those vaccines in any country or any
population that was at risk of HIV, and I put our country as one of them," said
Dr. Larry Corey, co-leader of the U.S. Coronavirus Vaccine Prevention Network,
who was a lead researcher on the Merck trial.
Gamaleya's vaccine will be administered in two doses: The first based on Ad26,
similar to J&J's candidate, and the second on Ad5.
Alexander Gintsburg, Gamaleya's director, has said the two-vector approach
addresses the immunity issue. Ertl said it might work well enough in individuals
who have been exposed to one of the two adenoviruses.
Many experts expressed skepticism about the Russian vaccine after the government
declared its intention to give it to high-risk groups in October without data
from large pivotal trials.
"Demonstrating safety and efficacy of a vaccine is very important," said Dr. Dan
Barouch, a Harvard vaccine researcher who helped design J&J's COVID-19 vaccine.
Often, he noted, large-scale trials "do not give the result that is expected or
required."
(Additional reporting by Christine Soares in New York, Kate Kelland in London,
Polina Ivanova in Moscow and Roxanne Liu in Beijing; Editing by Caroline Humer
and Bill Berkrot)
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