Published
5 years agoon
Many people know of the “patch” as a way to battle nicotine addiction.
Now, UC Davis is testing a similar technique to deliver a vaccine for COVID-19.
Verndari’s VaxiPatch is a single-dose vaccination kit that uses a dermal patch with a metal microneedle array to deliver vaccines.
The biopharmaceutical company states that “the technology eliminates the need for refrigeration, facilitates high-volume, automated manufacturing of vaccines and can potentially be self-administered on the subject’s arm.”
Verndari’s chief executive officer, Daniel R. Henderson, says, “Our new approach and previous work enabled us to quickly bring a potential vaccine against COVID-19 to preclinical testing. UC Davis provides a world-class forum for testing, with leading researchers and a full spectrum of supporting capabilities.”
Pre-clinical testing of the immune response to the vaccine began May 1 at the UC Davis Mouse Biology Program. Researchers there amended an existing protocol for influenza to test a COVID-19 vaccine in rats.
Kristin Grimsrud is a veterinarian and lead scientist at the Mouse Biology Program. She says, “Due to the impressive campus-wide effort to accelerate essential COVID-19 research, we were able to get approval on the amended protocol in less than 72 hours, allowing us to focus on SARS-CoV-2 vaccines.”
Verndari is also in discussions with the California National Primate Research Center at UC Davis to conduct further testing in rhesus macaques, a powerful animal model for COVID-19.
If the pre-clinical testing meets safety and efficacy goals, Phase 1 human clinical trials could begin.
[covid-19-tracker]
Study: First 10 Days After Leaving Hospital Pose Deadly Risks for COVID Patients
California Pins Vaccine Hopes on Biden Administration
Bay Area Restaurants, Wineries File Lawsuit Over Outdoor Dining Ban
Madera Hospital, With ICU Inundated, Transfers Patients to Other Facilities
‘Shameful’: US Virus Deaths Top 400k as Trump Leaves Office
Bill McEwen: Five Steps to Heal America Under Biden