A biotech out of Oxford is developing a vaccine to fight every type of flu

biotech out of Oxford is developing vaccine
Published on: Feb 5, 2018
Author: Amy Liu

Universal flu vaccine is being developed by a biotech spun out of Oxford University

The phase 2 trials could be completed by  the biotech company by the end of next year.

The biotech company, Vaccitech, says the vaccine — unlike those now found on the market — does not target surface antibodies.

Instead, it works from the center of the virus where there are few components which can change the virus strain.

“It should protect people against pandemic strains and that would be hugely valuable to have,” Vaccitech co-founder Adrian Hill told CNBC on Friday.

The company’s approach to the flu is different from what many vaccine manufacturers have adopted, Hill said, adding that he hopes any Vaccitech success will make pharmaceutical giants take an interest and get involved.

Vaccitech’s strategy has not been tested to work against the flu before, but Hill said his company has started trials involving thousands of people.

The tests mark the first time that a universal flu vaccine has progressed beyond phase 1 clinical testing and Vaccitech aims to complete phase 2B testing by the end of next year, he said.

An Indian mother and son wear masks as they stand in a queue at The Government Chest Hospital in Hyderabad on August 11, 2009.

Recently, the biotech start-up raised 20 million pounds (about $28 million) from investors including GV, the venture capital arm of Google parent Alphabet.

Vaccitech is also targeting two viruses that cause cancer — the human papillomavirus (HPV) and the hepatitis B virus.

“We are developing new vaccines again targeting cellular immunity that will go into the clinic in the next year or so to tackle those virus,” Hill said.

HPV is known to cause cervical cancer and the hepatitis B virus infects hundreds of millions of people in Asia alone and is a major cause of liver cancer.

“If the cellular immunity approach works, there are a lot of potential targets,” Hill said. “There are infections like HIV, where you can make a therapeutic HIV vaccine.”

Source: CNBC

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