Kaiser Permanente: COVID-19 Vaccine Generates Immune Response, Well Tolerated

Originally published on about.kaiserpermanente.org.

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases-sponsored phase 1 trial tested mRNA vaccine.

An investigational vaccine designed to protect against COVID-19 was generally well tolerated and prompted neutralizing activity in healthy adults, according to interim results published today in the New England Journal of Medicine. The lead author of the study, detailed in “A SARS-CoV-2 mRNA Vaccine — Preliminary Report,” is Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH, a senior investigator at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle.

Lisa Jackson
Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH

“The world urgently needs vaccines to protect against COVID-19,” Dr. Jackson said. “We are glad to be able to contribute to these efforts by initiating the first clinical trial of a COVID-19 vaccine, which was developed, produced, and put into a first-in-human clinical trial in record time.”

The ongoing phase 1 trial is supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, or NIAID, part of the National Institutes of Health. The experimental vaccine is being co-developed by researchers at NIAID and Moderna Inc. of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Manufactured by Moderna, mRNA-1273 is designed to induce neutralizing activity to block the virus from binding to and entering human cells.

The first study vaccination was administered on March 16 at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute. The interim report details the findings from the first 45 participants ages 18 to 55 years enrolled at the study sites in Seattle and Emory University in Atlanta through 57 days after their first vaccination. Three groups of 15 volunteers received 2 intramuscular injections, 28 days apart, of either 25, 100, or 250 micrograms of the investigational vaccine.

In April, the trial was expanded to enroll adults older than 55 years; it now has 120 participants. However, the newly published results cover the 18- to 55-year age group only.

Regarding safety, no serious adverse events were reported. More than half of the participants reported symptoms including fatigue, headache, chills, muscle aches, or pain at the injection site. Symptoms were more common following the second vaccination and in those who received the highest vaccine dose. Data on side effects and immune responses at various vaccine dosages informed the doses used or planned for use in the phase 2 and 3 clinical trials of the investigational vaccine.

The interim analysis reports on the levels of vaccine-induced neutralizing activity — through days 43 to 57 — after the second injection. Two doses of vaccine prompted high levels of neutralizing activity that were above the average values seen in convalescent serum obtained from people with confirmed cases of COVID-19 disease.

phase 2 clinical trial of mRNA-1273, sponsored by Moderna, began enrollment in late May. Plans are underway to launch a phase 3 efficacy trial in July 2020.

The COVID-19 Prevention Trials Network has a volunteer screening registry of people nationwide who are interested in participating in a range of vaccines and other preventive treatments at various research facilities in Seattle and around the country: coronaviruspreventionnetwork.org.

Kaiser Permanente Washington’s vaccine research group has a registry of Seattle-area people who want to be considered to participate in possible trials of investigational vaccines for COVID-19 at Kaiser Permanente Washington in Seattle: corona.kpwashingtonresearch.org.

Additional information about the phase 1 trial design is available at clinicaltrials.gov using the identifier NCT04283461. This trial was supported in part by NIAID grants UM1AI148373 (Kaiser Permanente Washington), UM1AI148576 (Emory University), and UM1AI148684 (Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Consortium). The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, or CEPI, provided funding for the manufacture of mRNA-1273 phase 1 material.

Read more about Kaiser Permanente’s research on vaccines.

Related

Trending Now

Follow us

Most Popular

Join Our Newsletter

Get the top workplace fairness news delivered straight to your inbox