Litcius/Paper detail

Development of an Inactivated Vaccine against SARS CoV-2

Shaikh Terkıs Islam Pavel, Hazel Yetişkin, Muhammet Ali Uygut, Ahmet Furkan Aslan, Günsu Aydın, Öznur İnan, B. S. Kaplan, Aykut Özdarendeli

2021Vaccines37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rapid spread of SARS-CoV-2 with its mutating strains has posed a global threat to safety during this COVID-19 pandemic. Thus far, there are 123 candidate vaccines in human clinical trials and more than 190 candidates in preclinical development worldwide as per the WHO on 1 October 2021. The various types of vaccines that are currently approved for emergency use include viral vectors (e.g., adenovirus, University of Oxford/AstraZeneca, Gamaleya Sputnik V, and Johnson & Johnson), mRNA (Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech), and whole inactivated (Sinovac Biotech and Sinopharm) vaccines. Amidst the emerging cases and shortages of vaccines for global distribution, it is vital to develop a vaccine candidate that recapitulates the severe and fatal progression of COVID-19 and further helps to cope with the current outbreak. Hence, we present the preclinical immunogenicity, protective efficacy, and safety evaluation of a whole-virion inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate (ERUCoV-VAC) formulated in aluminium hydroxide, in three animal models, BALB/c mice, transgenic mice (K18-hACE2), and ferrets. The hCoV-19/Turkey/ERAGEM-001/2020 strain was used for the safety evaluation of ERUCoV-VAC. It was found that ERUCoV-VAC was highly immunogenic and elicited a strong immune response in BALB/c mice. The protective efficacy of the vaccine in K18-hACE2 showed that ERUCoV-VAC induced complete protection of the mice from a lethal SARS-CoV-2 challenge. Similar viral clearance rates with the safety evaluation of the vaccine in upper respiratory tracts were also positively appreciable in the ferret models. ERUCoV-VAC has been authorized by the Turkish Medicines and Medical Devices Agency and has now entered phase 3 clinical development (NCT04942405). The name of ERUCoV-VAC has been changed to TURKOVAC in the phase 3 clinical trial.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunogenicityVirologyInactivated vaccineMedicineEconomic shortagePandemicOutbreakAttenuated vaccineImmunologyImmune systemCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)VaccinationBiologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Internal medicineGenePhilosophyVirulenceLinguisticsBiochemistryGovernment (linguistics)SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies