Sanofi and GSK delay COVID-19 vaccine, marking setback for global fight
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[December 11, 2020]
By Matthias Blamont
PARIS (Reuters) - Sanofi and
GlaxoSmithKline said clinical trials of their COVID-19 vaccine showed an
insufficient immune response in older people, delaying its launch to
late next year and marking a setback in the global fight against the
pandemic.
The announcement on Friday, which highlighted the challenges of
developing shots at record speed, hinders efforts to develop the
multiple options that experts say the world needs to counter a disease
that has killed over 1.5 million people.
The news, which came on the same day as Australia axed a domestic
vaccine project, is also a blow for many governments that have booked
hundreds of millions of doses of the shot, including the European Union,
United States and Britain.
Shares in France's Sanofi were down 2.8% at 0910 GMT while Britain's GSK
was up 0.2%.
The two companies said they planned to start another study next
February, hoping to come up with a more effective vaccine by the end of
2021.
The setback affects one of the most established technologies in vaccines
- used against the human papillomavirus, hepatitis B and pertussis among
other pathogens - which aims to introduce lab-made proteins into the
body to prod the immune system into developing a targeted defence
against the novel coronavirus.
It cements the lead of more novel approaches used by vaccines from the
likes of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, which use mRNA genetic technology
to trick the body into producing those proteins. Both of those shots
were found to be about 95% effective in successful large-scale trials.
Delays and additional trials are not unusual but the Sanofi/GSK
announcement highlights the unique set of challenges facing drugmakers
in multitasking science, speed and logistics during a pandemic that has
crushed global economies.
It also underscores why governments have spread their bets by securing
shots from different developers.
Australia, meanwhile, cancelled the production of a COVID-19 vaccine
developed by the University of Queensland and using an adjuvant made by
biotech firm CSL after trials showed it could interfere with HIV
diagnosis.
"Science cannot be all about producing positive results; negative
results will and must occur," said Diego Silva, an expert at the
University of Sydney School of Public Health.
"Negative results are also as important as success in science, since
they, too, form part of the evidence base for future research."
DELAYED TO LATE 2021
Sanofi said Friday's results from Phase I/II trials showed "an immune
response comparable to patients who recovered from COVID-19 in adults
aged 18 to 49 years, but a low immune response in older adults likely
due to an insufficient concentration of the antigen".
"With this type of vaccine, the result is not a surprise, we know that
more antigen is needed in older patients. But when in Phase I and II,
drugmakers test tolerance and one cannot test strong dosages," said
Jean-Daniel Lelievre, head of clinic immunology and infectious diseases
at Henri-Mondor hospital in Creteil, France.
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A researcher works in an industrial development laboratory at the
vaccine unit of French drugmaker Sanofi's Pasteur plant in Marcy-l'Etoile,
near Lyon, France June 16, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
"I would think Sanofi and GSK will be able to improve their
vaccine."
Phase III studies were expected to start this month. However Sanofi
said it would instead launch a phase 2b study in February.
"The study will include a proposed comparison with an authorized
COVID-19 vaccine," the company said, declining to give further
details on this.
"If data are positive, a global Phase III study could start in Q2
2021. Positive results from this study would lead to regulatory
submissions in the second half of 2021, hence delaying the vaccine's
potential availability from mid-2021 to Q4 2021."
The two companies said they had "updated governments and the
European Commission where a contractual commitment to purchase the
vaccine has been made".
BRITAIN JUMPS AHEAD
The vaccine uses the same recombinant protein-based technology as
one of Sanofi's seasonal influenza vaccines. It will be coupled with
an adjuvant, a substance that acts as a booster to the vaccine, made
by GSK.
Sanofi and GSK have scaled up manufacturing in order to be ready to
produce up to one billion doses of their vaccine in 2021. GSK said a
goal to produce 1 billion doses of adjuvants - with some expected to
be delivered to other partners - in 2021 remained in place but was
under review.
The Phase I/II study tested the safety, tolerability and immune
response of the vaccine in 440 healthy adults across 11
investigational sites in the United States..
This week, Britain started deploying the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine,
jumping ahead of the rest of the world in the race.
Canada has also given the green light for the shot, while a panel of
outside advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on
Thursday voted to endorse emergency-use authorization.
Britain's AstraZeneca Plc and Oxford University have also reported
late-stage data for their COVID-19 shot, which showed it has an
average success rate of about 70%.
Sanofi is working on another COVID-19 vaccine candidate with U.S.
company Translate Bio which uses mRNA technology. Phase I trials are
expected to start this month.
(Reporting by Matthias Blamont in Paris; Additional reporting by
Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt, Kate Kelland in London; Editing by
Josephine Mason and Pravin Char)
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