NEW DELHI: Data from
human trials of India’s first
homegrown mRNA COVID-
19 vaccine are likely to be
presented to authorities for
evaluation by the end of the
month, and company officials
are aiming to roll out the
product before April, two
senior scientists connected to
the Department of
Biotechnology told .
The mRNA vaccine
being developed by Punebased
Gennova
Biopharmaceuticals is
currently in phase 2/3 trials
to evaluate the safety,
tolerability and
immunogenicity of the
candidate vaccine in healthy
subjects. Around 4,000
volunteers have been
recruited for the trial.
India has so far
approved at least six
vaccines that can be
manufactured locally but only
two — Covishield and
Covaxin —have been
administered to over 99%
Indians. Globally, mRNA
vaccines have been at the
vanguard of inoculation
programmes in the United
States and Europe because
they exploit recent advances
in molecular biotechnology
and are said to be quicker to
manufacture than older, wellestablished
vaccine design
principles.
A limitation of the mRNA
vaccines, or those made by
Pfizer and Moderna, was that
they were required to be
stored in sub-zero conditions
— a tough proposition in a
country where such a degree
of refrigeration is limited in
availability. However, the
prospective Gennova
vaccine can be stored in
ordinary refrigerators, the
makers of Gennova have
claimed earlier. The mRNA
vaccine, can also purportedly
be tweaked to be effective
against newer variants, but
so far, all the vaccines
developed — including the
prospective Gennova
vaccine — have been
customised to the original
SARS-CoV-2.
Gennova has been
funded with ?125 crore from
the Department of
Biotechnology (DBT).
One official said that the
company had faced
challenges in recruiting
volunteers because, to
evaluate the vaccine’s
efficacy, it would be
necessary to find volunteers
who had neither been
vaccinated nor exposed to
the virus. Several serology
surveys have shown 70%-
90% of adults and children
have been exposed to the
virus, and hence express
antibodies on being tested
since March 2020.
“From what I know, the
company is ready to roll-out
the vaccine by March or April
and will be approaching the
Drug Controller General of
India soon,” said Govindraj
Padmanabhan, who chairs a
vaccine committee of the
DBT and has closely followed
developments in the vaccine
space.
Sanjay Singh, CEO,
G e n n o v a
Biopharmaceuticals, did not
respond to text messages for
comment.
As of Wednesday, India
has administered over 171
crore doses of COVID-19
vaccines.
Health Ministry figures
suggest that while 77% of the
eligible adult population in
India are fully vaccinated,
95% have received at least
one COVID-19 jab. Over
65% of adolescents in the 15-
18 years category have also
received their first dose. In
those vaccinated, close to
86% have received
Covishield while nearly 14%
have availed Covaxin.
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+91-xxxxxx
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