DUBLIN – The Lancet Infectious Diseases has published the first clinical data on BBIBP-CorV, an inactivated whole virus vaccine directed against SARS-CoV-2. The early stage phase I/II study tested the Chinese-developed vaccine in 540 healthy volunteers, including 96 older participants. All vaccine recipients seroconverted and the adverse event profile was mild.
Clinical updates, including trial initiations, enrollment status and data readouts and publications: Anavex, Apellis, Astex, Castle Creek, Eiger, GNT, Ionis, J&J, Janssen, Kalvista, Lysogene, Oryzon, Otsuka, Regenrx, Regulus, Sage, Vertex.
Despite an NIH move to pause enrollment in a trial testing Eli Lilly and Co.'s COVID-19 antibody candidate, LY-CoV555, after a participant's unexplained illness, at least three other studies of the candidate remain underway, the company said Oct. 14.
Cyclerion Therapeutics Inc.’s phase II blowup with sickle cell disease (SCD) candidate olinciguat ended its development, and attention turned to the Cambridge, Mass.-based firm’s earlier-stage effort with IW-6463, a drug in the same class for central nervous system (CNS) disorders.
Gossamer Bio Inc.’s finding of a subset of especially good responders in the phase IIb study called Leda may have taken some of the edge off two failures with GB-001, an oral DP2 antagonist undergoing tests in asthma and chronic rhinosinusitis. But the Street still wasn’t happy, and shares (NASDAQ:GOSS) of the San Diego-based firm closed Oct. 13 at $10.09, down $3.50, or 26%.
Johnson & Johnson said it has temporarily paused further dosing of its adenoviral vector-based COVID-19 vaccine candidate, JNJ-78436735, due to an unexplained illness in a study participant. Trial enrollment is also on hold while the company awaits a recommendation on how to proceed from the study's data safety monitoring board.
An NIH-sponsored phase III trial testing Eli Lilly and Co.'s SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody candidate, LY-CoV555, alongside the Gilead Sciences Inc. antiviral Veklury (remdesivir) has been paused at the request of its data safety monitoring board, the company told BioWorld.
LONDON – Apogenix GmbH has added its CD95 ligand inhibitor, asunercept, to the band of cancer immunotherapies that are being repurposed to treat the most severe effects of COVID-19 infection.