"We saw antibody responses that do many of the things we would want
to see in an eventual vaccine," said Dr. David Weiner, director of
the vaccine and immunotherapy center at the Wistar Institute, which
has collaborated with Inovio. "We are able to target things that
would prevent the virus from having a safe harbor in the body."
Inovio, which began human testing of its vaccine in April, said
preliminary results from that trial are expected in June. The 40
healthy participants in the Phase 1 trial are given two shots, four
weeks apart, of the vaccine, called INO-4800, and then followed for
two weeks.
"We are already seeing safety data and it has been benign," Dr.
Katherine Broderick, head of research and development at Inovio,
told Reuters. "Some people have slight redness of the arm."
Once the preliminary data are in, she said Inovio expects to
approach the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for authorization to
move into a Phase 2/3 trial, which could happen in July or August.
Inovio said the latest animal study results, published in the
journal Nature Communications, validate its DNA medicines platform
and build on previous positive clinical trial data for its
experimental vaccine against a different, but related, coronavirus
that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.
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That vaccine and INO-4800 are made using newer technology that
focuses on specific genes on the outer "spike" portion of the virus.
Inovio said the newly published data demonstrate virus neutralizing
activity using three separate testing procedures.
Study authors also said they detected the antibodies in the lungs of
the vaccinated animals.
Inovio next plans to test the vaccine in larger animals including
rabbits and monkeys, and to undertake "challenge" studies in mice,
ferrets and monkeys, Broderick said. Challenge studies involve
intentionally giving the virus to an animal and then seeing if the
vaccine prevents infection.
There are currently no approved treatments or vaccines for COVID-19,
the disease caused by the new coronavirus. Experts predict a safe
and effective vaccine could take 12 to 18 months to develop.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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