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Key research role in COVID-19 Human Challenge Study

21 October 2020

Scientists across 果冻影院 will play a key role in the world鈥檚 first human challenge study of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, providing new insight into the body鈥檚 immune response and finding out which vaccines are likely to work.

COVID-19 Human Challenge Study

The COVID-19 Human Challenge Programme, funded through the UK Government鈥檚 Vaccines Taskforce, is being run in partnership with Imperial College London, the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS),听hVIVO, a leading clinical company with expertise in viral human challenge models, and the听Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust.

The first phase of the trial, known as a virus characterisation study, will explore the feasibility of exposing healthy volunteers to the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus. Initially, the main aim will be to discover the smallest amount of virus it takes to cause a person to develop asymptomatic or mild COVID-19.

The study will recruit healthy volunteers aged between 18 and 30 with no previous history of COVID-19, no underlying health conditions and no known adverse risk factors for COVID-19, such as heart disease, diabetes or obesity.

Once the initial phase is complete, clinical researchers will use this human challenge model to study how different vaccines work in the body to stop or prevent COVID-19 and test potential treatments.

Leading 果冻影院 clinical academics who work the Royal Free Hospital trial site, will be involved in the direct clinical care of participants, including Dr Sir Mike Jacobs (果冻影院 Division of Infection & Immunity).

In addition, scientists in the 果冻影院 Division of Infection & Immunity, in collaboration with teams at Imperial College London, will also carry out critical research using new cutting-edge approaches to assessing the human immune response.

This work, co-ordinated by Professor Emma Morris (Director, 果冻影院 Division of Infection & Immunity) and Professor Robert Heyderman (Head, 果冻影院 Research Department of Infection) will exploit world leading research at 果冻影院 in understanding both innate and adaptive immune responses to infection.

Professor Morris said: 鈥淭hese studies are aimed at maximising our understanding of the how the immune system reacts to the virus very early after infection, and whether variations in this response predict protection by vaccines. This will also allow us to understand more fully which treatments are likely to be the most effective.鈥

This research will be carried out in specialist 听laboratories across 果冻影院 including the new 果冻影院 Institute of Immunity & Transplantation in the recently opened Pears Building on the Royal Free Hospital site 鈥 a joint venture between 果冻影院, the Royal Free Charity and the Royal Free London Hospitals NHS FT.

Manufacturing the virus

In readiness for the study, a team led by Professor Judith Breuer (果冻影院 Pathogen Genomics Unit (PGU)听and 果冻影院 GOS Institute of Child Health) has been working with hVivo on the production of the SARS-CoV-2 virus strain that will be used in the planned trial.

Specifically, the 果冻影院 PGU has undertaken sequencing of the virus as part of the quality assurance required before the SARS-CoV-2 challenge can be undertaken.

Professor Breuer said: We at the PGU are delighted to have been involved with hVivo in developing the virus that will be used for the vaccine challenge studies.

It is critically important work to ensure we know exactly what the virus sequence is. We look forward to collaborating on future research in this important area鈥

The 果冻影院 PGU has been established for 10 years during which time it has pioneered pathogen sequencing with a particular focus on high fidelity methods that introduce minimal methodological artefact. The work with hVivo has been carried out at the Zayed Centre for Research into Rare Disease in Children, a partnership between Great Ormond Street Hospital, 果冻影院 and Great Ormond Street Hospital Children鈥檚 Charity. The Zayed Centre for Research is the largest single academic manufacturing unit for gene and cell therapies in the UK and one of the largest in the world.

What are human challenge studies?

Human challenge studies help clinical researchers establish which vaccines are most likely to succeed and have been used for example for the evaluation of influenza, pneumonia, malaria and typhoid vaccines. As the prevalence of COVID-19 rises and falls in populations, it can make it difficult for traditional vaccine trials to assess if vaccines work, because volunteers receiving the vaccine may not be naturally exposed to the virus. Because a human challenge study deliberately and safely infects the volunteers it should be possible for scientists to begin to establish efficacy very quickly, by testing if those who have had a vaccine are less likely to become infected with the virus.

Human challenge studies also make it possible for scientists to compare the efficacy of vaccine candidates by testing them side by side to establish which is more effective. At this early stage no specific vaccine candidates for the human challenge trials have been confirmed.

First steps

Initially, researchers will assess what amount of virus is needed to safely cause infection and elicit an immune response by slowly increasing the viral dose to which small groups of volunteers are exposed. The proportion of participants becoming infected and the amount of virus that they subsequently shed will be tracked to better understand the course of infection.

As higher viral doses may be linked to more severe outcomes, the researchers are aiming to infect volunteers with the lowest possible dose to trigger viral replication but minimise symptoms. Before leaving the residential clinical facility, volunteers would be required to test negative for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in two separate laboratory tests, highly sensitive to the presence of virus.

The human challenge study will be reviewed by a specially convened ethics committee before any volunteers are enrolled and the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), an exemplar globally of medicines and device regulation, will be asked to approve the study before it is conducted. The studies will be overseen by an independent safety committee of experts.

Dr Chris Chiu, from the Department of Infectious Disease at Imperial College London and lead researcher on the human challenge studies, said: 鈥淗uman challenge studies can increase our understanding of COVID-19 in unique ways and accelerate development of the many potential new COVID-19 treatments and vaccines.

鈥淥ur number one priority is the safety of the volunteers. My team has been safely running human challenge studies with other respiratory viruses for over 10 years. No study is completely risk free, but the Human Challenge Programme partners will be working hard to ensure we make the risks as low as we possibly can.

鈥淭he UK鈥檚 experience and expertise in human challenge trials as well as in wider COVID-19 science will help us tackle the pandemic, benefiting people in the UK and worldwide."

Viral insights听

Since the start of the global pandemic, doctors have learned a great deal about how the SARS-CoV-2 virus spreads and which groups may be at increased risk, as well as gaining clinical insights into treatments which can reduce the severity of disease and its complications.

However, despite these advances, there remain very few therapies for treating patients with COVID-19 and there is no effective vaccine available. Human challenge studies could be a crucial component of progressing research into treating and preventing the disease.

Professor Peter Openshaw, co-investigator on the study and Director of the MRC-funded听Human Challenge Consortium (HIC-Vac)听at Imperial College London said: 鈥淒eliberately infecting volunteers with a known human pathogen is never undertaken lightly. However, such studies are enormously informative about a disease, even one so well studied as COVID-19.

鈥淚t is really vital that we move as fast as possible towards getting effective vaccines and other treatments for COVID-19, and challenge studies have the potential to accelerate and de-risk the development of novel drugs and vaccines. These studies form a part of the global effort and play to a unique strength that we have at Imperial and in the UK鈥.

Trial participation

Subject to ethics approval, the first study would start in early 2021 and focus on identifying the lowest levels of the virus needed to infect healthy consenting adult volunteers.

Anyone interested in registering their interest in future COVID-19 human challenge study research should visit听

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  • Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, credit 听CC听by 2.0

Media contact听

Henry Killworth

Tel: +44 (0) 7881 833274

E: h.killworth [at] ucl.ac.uk