| Literature DB >> 32837093 |
Mohammad S Khuroo1,2, Mohammad Khuroo3, Mehnaaz S Khuroo4, Ahmad A Sofi5, Naira S Khuroo6,7,8.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has turned into a global human tragedy and economic devastation. Governments have implemented lockdown measures, blocked international travel, and enforced other public containment measures to mitigate the virus morbidity and mortality. As of today, no drug has the power to fight the infection and bring normalcy to the utter chaos. This leaves us with only one choice namely an effective and safe vaccine that shall be manufactured as soon as possible and available to all countries and populations affected by the pandemic at an affordable price. There has been an unprecedented fast track path taken in Research & Development by the World community for developing an effective and safe vaccine. Platform technology has been exploited to develop candidate vaccines in a matter of days to weeks, and as of now, 108 such vaccines are available. Six of these vaccines have entered clinical trials. As clinical trials are "rate-limiting" and "time-consuming", many innovative methods are in practice for a fast track. These include parallel phase I-II trials and obtaining efficacy data from phase IIb trials. Human "challenge experiments" to confirm efficacy in humans is under serious consideration. The availability of the COVID-19 vaccine has become a race against time in the middle of death and devastation. There is an atmosphere of tremendous hype around the COVID-19 vaccine, and developers are using every moment to make claims, which remain unverified. However, concerns are raised about a rush to deploy a COVID-19 vaccine. Applying "Quick fix" and "short cuts" can lead to errors with disastrous consequences.Entities:
Keywords: ADE, Antibody-Dependent Enhancement; CEPI, Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations; COVID-19; COVID-19, Coronavirus Disease 2019; MERS-CoV, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus; MHC, Major Histocompatibility Complex; SARS-CoV-2; SARS-CoV-2, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2; WHO, World Health Organization; coronavirus; platform technology clinical trials; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32837093 PMCID: PMC7286271 DOI: 10.1016/j.jceh.2020.06.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Exp Hepatol ISSN: 0973-6883
Figure 1Schematic drawing of 8 platform strategies used for the development of COVID-19 vaccines, and the pathway each one follows to induce T cell and B cell immune response. The strategies include live-attenuated vaccine (LA), inactivated vaccine (IA), DNA vaccine (DNA), RNA vaccine (RNA), viral vector replicating vaccine (VVR), viral vector nonreplicating (VVNR), virus-like particles (VLP), and subunit vaccine (Subunit). CV, coronavirus; APC, antigen processing cell.
Figure 2Schematic drawing depicting FCγ receptor (FCγR)–mediated antibody-mediated enhancement. This response is mediated by the type of nonneutralizing antibodies mounted against infection or vaccination. The immune response to such vaccines is subverted, leading to exacerbated illness. The Fc-region of the antibody binds to FCγR on the immune cells, which subverts the immune response by reducing TH1 cytokines (IL-2, TNF-a, and IFN-γ) and skews TH2 cytokines (IL-10, IL-6, PGE-2, and INF-ά) and inhibits STAT pathway leading to increased viral replication. STAT-A, signal transducer and activator of transcription protein-A; IRF, interferon regulatory factor, INOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase.
Figure 3Schematic drawing showing steps in vaccine development. The vaccine development follows a unique stepwise pattern and is broadly divided into Exploratory, Preclinical, Clinical, and Postmarketing stages. The clinical stage is divided into 3 phases, namely phases I, II, and III. There are 2 regulatory permissions needed namely “Clinical Trial Authorization” before the clinical stage to allow “First-in-human” testing and marketing of the vaccine after successful clinical trials.
The Vaccine Development Stages and the Process.
| Phase | Aim | Features |
|---|---|---|
| Exploratory | Research intensive phase. | |
| Preclinical | Subjects: Vaccine is studied in Cell culture & animals. | |
| Clinical Trial Authorization | The basis for authorization-Manufacturing steps & analytical methods for vaccine & placebo production, | |
| Phase I | Subjects: Healthy volunteers (20-100). | |
| Phase II | Subjects: Healthy volunteers (hundreds), may include a diverse set of humans. | |
| Phase III | Subjects: Target population (thousands). | |
| Biologic License Application | The basis for approval-The vaccine is safe and effective in humans (Efficacy >95%). | |
| Phase IV | Spontaneous reporting (Adverse Events Reporting System). |
This figure includes vaccines that are abandoned during the development process.
Vaccine Efficacy (VE) = (Iu-Iv/Iu) ×100= (1-Iv/Iu) ×100= (1-RR) ×100%. (Iv = incidence in vaccine group, Iu = incidence in unvaccinated group, RR = relative risk).
Platform technology has shortened time for vaccine production from years to days.
Clinical trials are rate-limiting in vaccine marketing.
Human challenge studies can be done in phase IIa in certain diseases where the challenge is ethical.
Phase IIb studies can provide data on efficacy in regions with a high prevalence of the disease in the community.
The cost of developing a vaccine from research and discovery to product registration is around US$ 1 Billion.
The overall success rate for vaccine development is around 15%.
Various Types of VVaccines Categorized by the Antigen Used in the Preparation.
| Vaccine | Structure | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Attenuated | Virus is weakened by passing through animal or human cells, until genome mutates and unable to cause disease | Inexpensive, rapid production |
| Inactivated | Virus inactivated with formaldehyde or heat | Noninfectious, cannot cause disease. |
| DNA vaccine | Gene encoding antigenic components (Spike protein) | Safe, cannot cause disease. |
| RNA vaccine | mRNA vaccine for spike protein, with a lipid coat | Safe, cannot cause disease, |
| Replicating | An unrelated virus like measles or adenovirus is genetically engineered to encode the gene of interest | Safe, |
| Nonreplicating | An unrelated virus like measles or adenovirus (with inactive gene) is genetically engineered to encode the gene of interest | Safe, |
| Subunit | Antigenic components (spike protein) are generated | Safe, |
| Virus-like particles | Empty virus shells with no genetic material | Safe, |
ADE, antibody-dependent enhancement.
The Candidate COVID-19 Vaccines in Clinical Evaluation.
| Name of vaccine (Developer) | Candidate vaccine (Platform) | Location | Current stage (participants) | Trial quality | Status (completion date) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recombinant Adenovirus Type 5 Vector (Nonreplicating Viral Vector) | China | Phase II (500) | Safety & Immune response; Randomized double-blind placebo controlled | Recruiting (Jan 2021). | |
| Phase I (108) | Safety; 3 different doses | Completed. | |||
| Lipid nanoparticle-encapsulated mRNA (RNA) | USA | Phase II (IND submission) | – | – | |
| Phase I | Safety & immune response; 3 arms (dose 25, 100, 250 mcg) | Recruiting (June 2021). | |||
| Inactivated SARS-CoV + Alum (Inactivated) | China | Phase I-II (144) | Randomized double-blind single center placebo-controlled | Recruiting (Dec 2020) | |
| Adenovirus vector (Nonreplicating Viral Vector) | UK | Phase I-II (510) | Single-blinded randomized placebo controlled multicenter safety and efficacy. | Recruiting (May 2021) | |
| Lipid nanoparticle-encapsulated—mRNA (RNA) | Germany | Phase I-II (196) | Safety & immune response; 4 vaccines, dose-escalation, parallel cohort | Recruiting (May 2021) | |
| DNA plasmid vaccine with electroporation (DNA) | USA, South Korea | Planning phase II-III trials. | Safety and efficacy trial | – | |
| Phase I-II | Phase I in South Korea in parallel with phase I in the USA, completed phase I using 2 doses spaced 4 weeks apart. | Results June 2020 |