21 Jun 2021

Australia's first locally made Covid-19 mRNA vaccine candidate set for clinical trials

6:43 am on 21 June 2021

Australia is within months of clinical trials for a Covid-19 mRNA vaccine developed in Melbourne.

Doctor preparing a drug or vaccine in the clinic.

Victoria's government is allocating $A5 million to help the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences manufacture doses of its mRNA vaccine candidate for trials. Photo: AFP / Tek Image/Science Photo Library

Victoria's Acting Premier James Merlino announced on Sunday his government had allocated $A5 million from a $A50 million mRNA research fund to help the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences manufacture doses of its mRNA vaccine candidate for trials.

"This is an incredibly important, incredibly exciting step that we are making in our nation," Merlino said.

"This will get us on a pathway to local manufacturing capability."

Merlino said the investment in sovereign capability to produce mRNA vaccines was particularly important because the virus would remain for some time and there could be the need for yearly booster vaccines in the years ahead.

What are mRNA Covid-19 vaccines?

The vaccines developed by Moderna and Pfizer - which is available in Australia - are types of messenger RNA or mRNA vaccine

The mRNA vaccines use a genetic code called RNA to spark the production of the coronavirus's specific spike protein.

Once the mRNA enters the body's cells, the cells use the instructions contained in the RNA to make the spike protein.

Immune cells then recognise the spike protein as foreign and begin building an immune response against it.

Monash University's Colin Pouton, who is leading the research team behind the new mRNA candidate, said mRNA technology's advantages were that it was simpler to engineer and easy to adapt than protein vaccines.

The federal government is keen to get Australia's capacity to manufacture mRNA vaccines up and running, so Australia can have the technological ability to make its own Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which currently need to be imported.

Australia only can manufacture the AstraZeneca vaccine domestically, but under Australia's current guidelines, it is recommended that vaccine only be given to those aged 60 and older.

So what's been announced?

There are two linked, but separate, parts to the announcement.

Firstly, we've learnt about the progress being made on the development of a potential mRNA vaccine in Australia.

It's been developed by Monash University researchers, who are partnering with the Doherty Institute to run trials looking at both the mRNA and a protein vaccine at the same time.

They are hoping to have Phase 1 clinical trial up and running by October or November, with around 150 trial participants.

Secondly, Professor Pouton said the trial of an mRNA vaccine presented an opportunity to equip manufacturers with the ability to make mRNA vaccines.

"So during this period of making a clinical trials product for Phase 1, we'll be skilling up those companies to start getting into manufacturing so that they could manufacture other products and other Covid products going forward," he said.

The question of what Covid-19 mRNA vaccine Australia might make with that capability is not yet resolved.

Professor Pouton said if commercial agreements were struck with Pfizer or Moderna, it was possible Australia could start manufacturing those vaccines at CSL.

Or, if trials for the Monash-developed vaccine go well and pass through all the other hurdles, it may be that the first mRNA vaccine manufactured in Australia is designed in the country, too.

How is this mRNA vaccine candidate different to Pfizer?

Professor Pouton said the vaccine under development was a "variant vaccine", modelled from the Beta strain, which was first detected in South Africa.

Existing vaccines have been modelled on the original version of the virus first detected in Wuhan.

Professor Pouton said the second key difference was that existing approved vaccines were what you might call "whole spike vaccines", which prompted the body to build antibodies for the whole spike of the virus.

"The problem with that is that you're sort of raising antibodies against other parts of the protein, which isn't necessarily a problem if the only vaccine is the only virus circulating is Wuhan [strain]," he said.

But variants that have emerged contain mutations at what's referred to as the "receptor-binding domain", which Professor Pouton said accounted for roughly 10 per cent of the overall mass of the coronavirus spike protein.

The new vaccine candidate is aimed at presenting solely the receptor-binding domain to the immune system.

"The advantage of that is that it should lead to neutralising antibodies which bind directly to the receptor-binding domain, which is what we're really trying to achieve with an antibody response," Pouton said.

He said his team believed this approach was likely to produce a better kind of booster shot for future variants, which could be given to those already vaccinated against the original strain.

The team is also in the early stages of testing an mRNA vaccine candidate modelled on the Kappa variant.

And there's a protein vaccine being trialled as well?

Yes, that's right. While Monash University has developed an mRNA vaccine candidate, the Doherty Institute has developed a protein vaccine candidate.

Both of them are focused on the receptor-binding domain of the Beta strain, so Professor Pouton said it made sense to work together and run the Phase 1 trial side by side.

The hope is, we'll learn more about whether the approach of targeting the receptor-binding domain is going to be useful to prepare us against future variations.

When will the clinical trials start?

Professor Pouton said the trials should start in October or November and would run until all the data was collected for a year.

"But we'll get an early indication of safety and the responses, the serum responses, from individual patients, fairly early on in the trial," Professor Pouton said.

"Perhaps within the first three months, we'll have a pretty good idea"

About 150 people will be involved in the clinical trial, with preliminary results expected to be available in the first half of 2022.

How soon could it be available?

While the news is exciting, there are still several steps required before the vaccine becomes available.

A lot will depend on how the Phase 1 trials go.

But they're promising, Professor Pouton said the project would require a significant investment so it could proceed to larger efficacy studies.

"With Moderna and Pfizer, a huge amount of public funding went into their development," he said.

He said the US government's biomedical research group, BARDA, invested $1 billion into making the Moderna vaccine.

But he said it may not be necessary to get that level of investment in Australia if a smaller-scale study could demonstrate to the Therapeutic Goods Administration that the vaccine was "safe and efficacious".

"And that's an area that is sort of still under discussion really, what's the minimum you'd need to do to show efficacy," he said.

He said because the mRNA vaccine candidate was not "radically different" from that of Moderna or Pfizer, his research team did not expect there would be any issues with safety.

- ABC

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