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Medicine Biotech

Several Pharmaceutical Companies Are Racing To Develop a Coronavirus Vaccine (morningstar.com) 76

"The race for a vaccine to combat the new coronavirus is moving faster than researchers and drugmakers expected," reported Dow Jones News Services this week, "with Pfizer Inc. joining several other groups saying that they had accelerated the timetable for testing and that a vaccine could be ready for emergency use in the fall." Pfizer said Tuesday it will begin testing of its experimental vaccine in the U.S. as early as next week. On Monday, Oxford University researchers said their vaccine candidate could be available for emergency use as early as September if it passes muster in studies, while biotech Moderna Inc. said it was preparing to enter its vaccine into the second phase of human testing... If the vaccine shows signs of working safely in the study, Moderna said the third and final phase of testing could start in the fall. The company said it could seek FDA approval to sell the vaccine by year's end, if it succeeds in testing...

Merck & Co., a longtime maker of vaccines, said it is talking to potential partners about three different technologies to manufacture coronavirus vaccines... Johnson & Johnson said earlier this month it shaved months off the usual timelines for developing a vaccine, and expects to start human testing of a coronavirus candidate as soon as September, with possible availability on an emergency-use basis in early 2021.

SFGate also reports that GlaxoSmithKline and the French pharmaceutical company Sanofi "expect their vaccine will be ready for human testing in the second half of 2020."

And the Associated Press notes that America's Food and Drug Administration (FDA) "is tracking at least 86 active different approaches among pharmaceutical companies, academic researchers and scientists around the globe." Dr. Peter Marks, director of the agency's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, adds "We expect about two dozen more to enter clinical trials by this summer and early fall."
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Several Pharmaceutical Companies Are Racing To Develop a Coronavirus Vaccine

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  • Open source (Score:4, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Saturday May 02, 2020 @04:39PM (#60015554)

    There's also at least 20 open source vaccine design efforts that have no publicity for example:

    https://github.com/feraliscatu... [github.com]

    • "Open Source" vaccine? What are you planning on doing, 3D printing a dose?
      • I think the idea is to create one that can't be patented by a single company that charges 1000%+ of the fair market value.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by guruevi ( 827432 )

          What is the fair market value?

          • Whatever COMPETITION will bear. A company with a monopoly will never charge anywhere near the fair market.

          • What is the fair market value?

            Whatever these american pesos are worth after economic collapse.

        • by henni16 ( 586412 )
          I doubt that there will be much of a "fair market".
          If the price isn't reasonable, a compulsory licensing order would probably be a best case scenario for someone trying to squeeze pretty much the entire world's governments for money.
          Given the amount of doses needed world-wide, I wouldn't even be surprised to see some sort of compulsory licensing to competitors even if there's no price gouging - simply to make use of as much production capacity as fast as possible.
          • Almost certainly true, in this case.

            In a more general sense, an open sourced vaccine would help show what fair market, with competition would actually be, rather than let a predatory corp charge whatever the bloated US insurance framework will let them reap (and screw anyone without coverage).

    • by GFNV ( 5431198 )
      Can it run on Linux?
    • by Briareos ( 21163 )

      Especially this post [sciencemag.org], now titled "A Close Look at the Frontrunning Coronavirus Vaccines As of May 1 (updated)".

      And if you're looking for something to take your mind off COVID-19, try this category [sciencemag.org]... :)

  • These timetables are being presented by companies and research groups which spent the last 20 years trying to develop an HIV vaccine. We still don't have it. There's a strong possibility that we won't have a working C19 vaccine _at all_, not just this fall, but for years to come.

    • These timetables are being presented by companies and research groups which spent the last 20 years trying to develop an HIV vaccine. We still don't have it. ...

      ...but also a further friendly, if somewhat cynical, reminder: As large as HIV's potential vaccine-market surely is, there's never been one comparable to COVID's...

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Further reminder that pharmaceutical companies are racing to collect grants to research a vaccine. A goodish portion of this is more properly viewed as pharmaceutical companies racing to the trough while fear is still high.

      Apparently risking research with the possibility that it might be unprofitable doesn't fit into this newfangled capitalism.

  • So answer this. "Not-so-effective" is less of a problem. We aren't so concerned with snake oil possibilities slowing introduction down.

    But what about "bad for you"? Are vaccines that cause long-term issues (that are bad enough it is not worth the risk vs. the disease) a problem with vaccine development?

    And don't say crap like autism because it's not true. And don't respond to that, goobers.

    • by Briareos ( 21163 )

      But what about "bad for you"? Are vaccines that cause long-term issues (that are bad enough it is not worth the risk vs. the disease) a problem with vaccine development?

      Considering that the long-term issues other than death caused by SARS-CoV-2 include a stroke or permanent lung damage - that's asking quite a lot for the vaccine/cure to be worse than the disease.

    • Yea, there was a failed malaria one that hyper-sensitized [sciencemag.org] and killed over a hundred children while only being rolled out to several hundred thousand children. This was a preventable disaster, and thankfully wasn’t nearly as bad as it could have been. The potential for a similar sensitivity has happened for some SARS-cov-1 animal trials [reuters.com] and the risk of a vaccine that’s not properly tested making things much worse is very real.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Sure. Some of the early polio vaccines would give you polio. Besides the people who got polio from it, that little oopsie set back polio eradication quite a bit. Some people still don't trust vaccination programs because of it.

      Many of the COVID-19 vaccines use a new method where the vaccine consists of some messenger RNA that enters your cells and causes them to produce a particular protein from the virus, which your immune system learns to attack. That process seems to work great in animals, but has never

  • Anybody else hear Cake's song The Distance in your head while reading the headline? https://youtu.be/F_HoMkkRHv8 [youtu.be]
  • After the genetic code was published, several labs were bragging that they had created a vaccine by removing a few key components and adding a variation of/related to the SARS-cov-2 spike protein in under 48 hours. Creating a vaccine is easy, cheap, and quick. That’s why we have something like 40-80 of them at the moment depending on how you define it.

    Careful testing to make sure it doesn’t hyper sensitize people to make covid-19 90% fatal in days or create life altering debilitating conditi
  • Covid-19 vaccines market is over Billions of doses, especially if the acquired immunity is limited to a short time (a couple of years). So nations will need lots of vaccines and FAST. Since most vaccine R&D continue on similar principles and methods, most of the companies will have customers to sell, lots of them. Maybe they will pay a small royalty to the original founder.
  • Is Quantum computing + Cloud computing + Artificial Intelligence + Machine Learning not useful in Vaccine development?

FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis

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