Imperial College London's
vaccine candidate is being developed and trialled with the help of more than
£41 million in funding from the UK government and a further £5 million in
philanthropic donations.
The human trial of Imperial College London's candidate coronavirus vaccine began on Tuesday with the first healthy volunteer receiving a small dose of it.
It is a second such trial
in the UK. The first candidate vaccine that went for the human trial was from
Oxford University.
The clinical team, which
delivered a small dose of the vaccine to the participant at a West London
facility, is closely monitoring the participant and report that they are in
good health with no safety concerns, said the college in a press release.
The trials are the first
test of a new self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) technology, which has the potential
to revolutionise vaccine development and enable scientists to respond more
quickly to emerging diseases, the college said.
The volunteer has asked to
remain anonymous.
Imperial
College London's vaccine candidate is being developed and trialled with the
help of more than £41 million in funding from the UK government and a further
£5 million in philanthropic donations.
Dr Katrina Pollock, from
Imperial's Department of Infectious Disease and Chief Investigator of the
study, said: "We have reached a significant milestone in this
ground-breaking study with the first dose of a self-amplifying RNA vaccine
delivered safely."
"We are now poised to
test the vaccine in the dose evaluation phase before moving forward to
evaluating it in larger numbers."
The volunteer will receive
a second booster dose within four weeks. Several others are expected to receive
the first dose over the coming days. The clinical team will continue to monitor
all participants closely for safety, as well as look to see if they produce
antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
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