Author:
Ponce-de-León Samuel,Torres Martha,Soto-Ramírez Luis Enrique,José Calva Juan,Santillán-Doherty Patricio,Carranza-Salazar Dora Eugenia,Carreño Juan Manuel,Carranza Claudia,Juárez Esmeralda,Carreto-Binaghi Laura E.,Ramírez-Martínez Luis,Rosa Georgina Paz-De la,Vigueras-Moreno Rosalía,Ortiz-Stern Alejandro,López-Vidal Yolanda,Macías Alejandro E.,Torres-Flores Jesús,Rojas-Martínez Oscar,Suárez-Martínez Alejandro,Peralta-Sánchez Gustavo,Kawabata Hisaaki,González-Domínguez Irene,Martínez-Guevara José Luis,Sun Weina,Sarfati-Mizrahi David,Soto-Priante Ernesto,Chagoya-Cortés Héctor Elías,López-Macías Constantino,Castro-Peralta Felipa,Palese Peter,García-Sastre Adolfo,Krammer Florian,Lozano-Dubernard Bernardo
Abstract
AbstractThere is still a need for safe, efficient and low-cost coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines that can stop transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Here we evaluated a vaccine candidate based on a live recombinant Newcastle disease virus (NDV) that expresses a stable version of the spike protein in infected cells as well as on the surface of the viral particle (AVX/COVID-12-HEXAPRO, also known as NDV-HXP-S). This vaccine candidate can be grown in embryonated eggs at low cost similar to influenza virus vaccines and it can also be administered intranasally, potentially to induce mucosal immunity. We evaluated this vaccine candidate in prime-boost regimens via intramuscular, intranasal, or intranasal followed by intramuscular routes in an open label non-randomized non-placebo-controlled phase I clinical trial in Mexico in 91 volunteers. The primary objective of the trial was to assess vaccine safety and the secondary objective was to determine the immunogenicity of the different vaccine regimens. In the interim analysis reported here, the vaccine was found to be safe and the higher doses tested were found to be immunogenic when given intramuscularly or intranasally followed by intramuscular administration, providing the basis for further clinical development of the vaccine candidate. The study is registered under ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT04871737. Funding was provided by Avimex and CONACYT.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory