Israel said near to deal with Moderna to supply experimental coronavirus vaccine

Report comes as countries scramble to ensure they will be among first to receive vaccines, if and when they become available; US biotech company to begin Phase 3 trials next month

TOI staff15 June 2020, 1:41 am

In this March 16, 2020, file photo, a pharmacist gives Jennifer Haller, left, the first shot in the first-stage safety study clinical trial of a potential vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, at the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle. The vaccine by Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Moderna Inc., generated antibodies similar to those seen in people who have recovered from COVID-19 in a study volunteers who were given either a low or medium dose. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Israel is close to signing a deal with US biotech firm Modern to supply it with a vaccine against COVID-19 if the company’s drug development is successful,  Channel 13 TV reported Sunday.

The company announced last week that it will enter the third and final stage of its clinical trial in July with 30,000 participants.

The report comes as countries jostle to ensure that they will be among the first to receive vaccines when they are developed. It did not divulge any of the parameters of the deal, saying only that it would be signed soon.

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Moderna’s vaccine effort is a global frontrunner, alongside a vaccine being developed by the University of Oxford with AstraZeneca, which has also launched a large scale trial on 10,000 volunteers and expects results by September.

AstraZeneca on Saturday announced plans to begin delivering 400 million doses of the vaccine to European countries by the end of this year under the agreement with the Inclusive Vaccine Alliance, formed this month by France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands. All other EU member states will have the chance to take part under the same terms as the original alliance members.

Moderna’s third stage trials allow scientists to observe, using a large healthy population, whether the vaccine is more effective than a placebo at preventing COVID-19 and also whether it can prevent infection with the coronavirus that causes the disease.

A sign marks an entrance to a Moderna, Inc., building, Monday, May 18, 2020, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)

The framework for the study was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is being conducted in collaboration with the US National Institutes for Health (NIH).

Moderna has received $483 million in US government funding, and on May 18 announced its first results among eight participants from the first phase of testing, which were seen as encouraging.

If the dose amount chosen for the trials of 100 micrograms proves effective, Moderna expects to be able to make 500 million doses per year, or even up to a billion.

Moderna is one of five companies that the administration of US President Donald Trump is betting on to deliver, under its “Warp Speed” push for a vaccine.

The others are the Oxford vaccine, Johnson & Johnson, Merck and Pfizer.

The goal is to produce 300 million vaccine doses by January 2021.

Moderna’s vaccine relies on implanting the genetic code of a portion of the virus inside the human body in order to elicit an immune response.

So-called messenger RNA vaccines have not been proven so far against any virus, but Moderna are confident it works.

After Phase 2 trials the company’s Israeli chief medical officer said that its experimental anti-COVID-19 vaccine “actually works,” after tests on a small number of volunteers.

Moderna’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Tal Zaks. (Courtesy)

“We got the first results today… and today we are showing that it actually works… we are able to stimulate the immune system,” Dr. Tal Zaks said.

The deals are the latest in a series of agreements to produce the vaccines — even though it is not certain they will work to prevent coronavirus infections. Because of the desperate need for a vaccine amid the pandemic that has killed more than 428,000 people worldwide drug companies are scaling up manufacturing with human trials still under way.

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