COVID-19 vaccine tablet significantly reduces viral load in hamsters
Posted: 17 November 2020 | Hannah Balfour (Drug Target Review) | No comments yet
Hamster challenge study results suggests the oral COVID-19 vaccine induces a robust immune response, protecting the animals from infection.
Vaxart Inc., a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing vaccine tablets, has announced that its oral COVID-19 vaccine candidate potently induced an antibody response and significantly reduced the lung viral load in a hamster challenge study.
The enterprise added that two doses of the recombinant adenoviral oral vaccine protected the hamsters from intranasal challenge as well as intranasal vaccination. Indicators of this were:
- no systemic weight loss, compared to nine percent total loss in unvaccinated animals
- minimal change in lung weight, the weight of the lungs in unvaccinated hamsters was over two times that of the ones receiving the oral vaccine
- significant reduction in lung viral load (four or five log less) in hamsters that received two oral vaccine doses, as compared to non-vaccinated animals; and
- serum IgG antibody titers above 10,000 in hamsters that received two oral vaccine doses.
“These additional data provide further evidence supporting the efficacy potential of our oral COVID-19 vaccine candidate,” said Andrei Floroiu, chief executive officer of Vaxart. “In addition, we believe that our room-temperature-stable oral tablet vaccine would be a more convenient, more practical solution to the COVID-19 pandemic as compared to cold-chain dependent injectable vaccines.”
The company said that the hamsters in the study were vaccinated at zero and four weeks, then challenged with SARS-CoV-2 at week eight. According to the researchers, hamsters are considered an excellent model for assessing COVID-19 infection for several reasons: they can be infected intranasally; if infected, they demonstrate clinical symptoms such as weight loss, labored breathing and ruffled fur; and can also develop lung damage similar to that seen in humans, including lung inflammation.
Related topics
Drug Development, Drug Leads, Immunogenicity, Immunology, In Vivo, Research & Development, Vaccine
Related conditions
Coronavirus, Covid-19
Related organisations
Vaxart
Related people
Andrei Floroiu