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SATURDAY, JULY 05, 2025
Light of hope after Covid-19 vaccine displays result in macaque monkeys

Coronavirus chronicle

TBS Report
15 May, 2020, 09:35 pm
Last modified: 15 May, 2020, 09:44 pm

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Light of hope after Covid-19 vaccine displays result in macaque monkeys

The vaccine appeared to protect the animals against developing pneumonia

TBS Report
15 May, 2020, 09:35 pm
Last modified: 15 May, 2020, 09:44 pm
Representational Image Photo: Wikipedia
Representational Image Photo: Wikipedia

Early hope of a vaccine rises after a coronavirus vaccine seems to have provided defence against the Covid-19 in six rhesus macaque monkeys.

Even though Rhesus macaques share similar immune systems to humans, the result does not guarantee if it will work on a person.

However, the vaccine right now is undergoing human clinical trials, reports the BBC.

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A group of monkeys was exposed to the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The six animals that were vaccinated had less of the virus in their lungs and airways.

The trial took place in the US, involving researchers from the US government's National Institutes of Health (NIH) and from the University of Oxford.

The vaccine appeared to protect the animals against developing pneumonia.

Promisingly, the animals also didn't develop "immune-enhanced disease" - which BBC medical correspondent Fergus Walsh described as a "theoretical risk". That's when the vaccine triggers a worse response to a disease.

This response was seen in some early animal vaccine trials against SARS - another coronavirus - and proved a stumbling block in developing a vaccine for that disease.

The study hasn't yet been reviewed by other scientists and formally published, but Prof Stephen Evans at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine described it as "high quality" and "very encouraging".

Meanwhile, trials in the UK on more than 1,000 human volunteers are currently taking place through the University of Oxford.

There are more than 100 experimental coronavirus vaccines currently being developed.

Dr Penny Ward, a visiting professor in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London, said it was "helpful" to see that the vaccine didn't cause a worse disease response in these monkeys and that they didn't develop pneumonia after being vaccinated.

The vaccine is based on a small part of the virus's distinctive "spike". The idea is that by getting the body to recognise a unique part of the virus when it is exposed to the whole thing it will know how to react, and produce the right antibodies to fight it off.

That did seem to be happening to the vaccinated macaques, which produced antibodies capable of fighting the virus.

Top News

COVID-19 / Vaccine / macaque monkeys

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