Pfizer starts late-stage trial of mRNA-based flu vaccine
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[September 15, 2022]
(Reuters) - Pfizer Inc said on
Wednesday it had started a late-stage U.S. trial of an influenza vaccine
involving 25,000 patients, among the first such studies for a messenger
RNA flu shot.
The company said that the first participants had been dosed with the
vaccine, which is based on the same technology used in its widely-used
COVID-19 shot developed in partnership with Germanay's BioNTech SE.
Influenza causes 12,000 to 52,000 deaths in the United States every
year, but the strains used in vaccines have to be changed annually ahead
of the flu season as circulating viruses keep evolving.
Messenger RNA technology allows changing the vaccine strains relatively
faster, and Pfizer expects this flexibility and its rapid manufacturing
to potentially allow better strain matches in future years.
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Pfizer logo is seen in this illustration
taken, May 1, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Currently, vaccines against flu such
as CSL Seqirus' Fluad Quadrivalent or Flucelvax Quadrivalent are
inactivated vaccines, where viruses are grown in a culture and then
killed using certain chemicals, a process that requires months.
Early-stage data from Moderna Inc's flu vaccine last year
disappointed investors after it showed the company's mRNA-based flu
vaccine was no better than the already approved shots in the market.
Moderna, though, also started a late-stage trial of its flu vaccine
in June this year.
(Reporting by Leroy Leo in Bengaluru; Editing by Vinay Dwivedi)
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