COVID-19 vaccine development pipeline gears up: Vaccine makers are racing to develop COVID-19 vaccines, and have advanced ten candidates into clinical trials. But challenges remain. Asher Mullard reports.
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Resumen
Vaccine development is typically a
long game. The US Food and Drug
Administration only approved a
first vaccine against Ebola virus last
year, 43 years after the deadly virus
was discovered. Vaccinologists have
made little headway with HIV or
respiratory syncytial virus, despite
huge investments. On average, it takes
10 years to develop a vaccine. With the
COVID-19 crisis looming, everyone is
hoping that this time will be different.
It might be. Already, ten vaccines against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
(SARS-COV-2) are in clinical trials
(table), and researchers at the
University of Oxford and AstraZeneca
hope to have the first phase 3 data in
hand this summer. Although many
infectious disease experts argue that
even 18 months for a first vaccine is
an incredibly aggressive schedule, a
few optimists believe that hundreds
of millions of doses of vaccine might
be ready for roll-out by the end of
2020