UK
backs COVID-19 vaccine trials that infect volunteers
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[October 20, 2020]
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain said on Tuesday
it would back "human challenge" trials, where young and healthy
volunteers are deliberately infected with COVID-19, to accelerate the
development of vaccines for the disease.
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The government said it would invest 33.6 million pounds ($43.5
million) in the studies in partnership with Imperial College London,
laboratory and trial services company hVIVO and the Royal Free
London NHS Foundation Trust.
If approved by regulators and an ethics committee, the studies would
start in January with results expected by May 2021, the government
said.
Britain's hVIVO, a unit of pharmaceutical services company Open
Orphan <ORPH.L>, said on Friday it was carrying out preliminary work
for the trials.
Using controlled doses of virus, the aim of the research team will
initially be to discover the smallest amount of virus it takes to
cause COVID-19 infection in small groups of healthy young people,
aged between 18 and 30, who are at the lowest risk of harm, the
government said.
Up to 90 volunteers could be involved at the early stage, it said.
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Imperial College's Chris Chiu, lead researcher on the human challenge study,
said the trials could increase understanding of COVID-19 in unique ways and
accelerate development of the many potential new treatments and vaccines.
"Our number one priority is the safety of the volunteers," he said. "My team has
been safely running human challenge studies with other respiratory viruses for
over 10 years. No study is completely risk free, but the Human Challenge
Programme partners will be working hard to ensure we make the risks as low as we
possibly can."
$1 = 0.7730 pounds)
(Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by Michael Holden)
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