Coronavirus vaccine trial by Imperial College London begins
Researchers at Imperial College London will this
week begin clinical trials of a possible coronavirus vaccine in 300 people.
The healthy participants, aged between 18 and 70,
will all receive two doses of the vaccine over the coming weeks, and the hopes
is that tests could then move on to 6,000 volunteers if there is an effective
immune response.
Rather than giving people a weakened form of the
illness, the Imperial vaccine instead uses synthetic strands of genetic code
based on the genetic material of Sars-CoV-2, the “novel coronavirus”
responsible for the pandemic.
Robin Shattock, the Imperial College London
professor leading its development, has told Bloomberg that early protective
vaccines might not completely stop a person contracting the virus. “Is that
protection against infection? Is it protection against illness? Is it
protection against severe disease? It’s quite possible a vaccine that only
protects against severe disease would be very useful.”
When injected, the Imperial experimental vaccine
instructs muscle cells to produce virus proteins to protect against future
infection. In animal tests, the vaccine was shown to be safe and showed
“encouraging signs of an effective immune response”, Shattock’s team said.
The research has been funded by £41m from the UK
government, as well as £5m of other donations, and comes after a separate
vaccine from experts at Oxford University started undergoing human clinical
trials.




