Breakthrough close on coronavirus antibody therapy

Scientists working on coronavirus treatments may be
close to a breakthrough on an antibody treatment that could save the lives of
people who become infected, it has been reported.
An injection of cloned antibodies that counteract
Covid-19 could prove significant for those in the early stages of infection,
according to the British-Swedish pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca.
AstraZeneca’s chief executive Pascal Soriot told the
newspaper that the treatment being developed is “a combination of two
antibodies” in an injected dose “because by having both you reduce the chance
of resistance developing to one antibody”.
Antibody therapy is more expensive than vaccine
production, with Soriot saying the former would be prioritised for the elderly
and vulnerable “who may not be able to develop a good response to a vaccine”.
On Thursday, AstraZeneca signed a deal with the
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi) to help manufacture
300million globally accessible doses of the coronavirus vaccine candidate being
developed by the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford.
AstraZeneca has already started to manufacture the
Oxford University Covid-19 vaccine to ensure that if it does pass human trials,
it can be made available in the autumn. Trials of the potential vaccine have
started in Brazil, a new epicentre of the pandemic, to ensure the study can be
properly tested as transmission rates fall in the UK. The Jenner Institute and
the Oxford Vaccine Group began development on a vaccine in January, using a
virus taken from chimpanzees.
One member of Cepi is the Serum Institute of India,
which the Sunday Telegraph reports is considering other “parallel” partnerships
with AstraZeneca that may lead to the antibody treatment being funded as a
stand-alone treatment.
Meanwhile UK-based vaccine manufacturer Seqirus
announced it was working in partnership with parent company CSL, Cepi and the
University of Queensland to help develop a candidate Covid-19 vaccine in
Australia. Its manufacturing base in Liverpool is producing an adjuvant, an
agent that improves the immune response to a vaccine.