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Pfizer stock jumps after it reports positive data in early-stage coronavirus vaccine trial
Pfizer shares jumped after it released positive results from its closely watched early-stage human trial on a coronavirus vaccine.
www.cnbc.com
Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
Pfizer shares jumped by nearly 7% in premarket trading Wednesday after it released positive results from its closely watched early-stage human trial on a coronavirus vaccine.
The trial evaluated 45 people. Each participant received 10, 30 or 100 microgram doses of the vaccine or a placebo.
The company coronavirus vaccine produced neutralizing antibodies, which researchers say is important for acquiring protection, in all participants who received two of the 10 or 30 microgram doses after 28 days, according to the preliminary data, which were posted in a paper released on MedRXiv. The company said the levels of neutralizing antibodies were 1.8 to 2.8 times higher than in recovered Covid-19 patients.
After 28 days, all participants in the two lower dose groups had significant levels of binding antibodies, the company said.
“We are encouraged by the clinical data of BNT162b1, one of four mRNA constructs we are evaluating clinically, and for which we have positive, preliminary, topline findings,” Kathrin Jansen, head of Pfizer’s vaccine research and development, said in a press release. “We are dedicated to develop potentially groundbreaking vaccines and medicines, and in the face of this global health crisis, we approach this goal with the utmost urgency.”
The U.S.-based pharmaceutical giant has been working alongside German drugmaker BioNTech. The company’s experimental vaccine contains genetic material called messenger RNA, or mRNA. The mRNA is a genetic code that tells cells what to build — in this case, an antigen that may induce an immune response for the virus.
Pfizer said the vaccine was generally well-tolerated, though the experimental vaccine also caused fever in some patients, especially for those who were in the 100 microgram group. Most patients reported pain at the injection site, which was mild to moderate, the company said, except in one of 12 subjects who received a 100 microgram dose, which was severe.
The findings posted Wednesday have not been peer-reviewed yet.
The effort by Pfizer and BioNTech is one of several working on a potential vaccine to prevent Covid-19, which has infected more than 10 million people worldwide and killed at least 511,851, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. There are more than 100 vaccines currently under development, according to the World Health Organization.
Another leading vaccine candidate from biotech firm Moderna is expected to enter a late-stage trial later this month, pending data from a mid-stage trial.
Hopes to get a vaccine to market are high, but scientists are setting expectations low for how quickly it can happen. Developing, testing and reviewing any potential vaccine is a long, complex and expensive endeavor that could take years, global health experts say.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, has said he is “cautiously optimistic” scientists can find a safe and effective vaccine by early 2021.
Scientists hope the antibodies provide some degree of protection against getting Covid-19, but they can’t say that definitively yet since it hasn’t been studied in-depth and some patients appear to have been reinfected after recovering from the virus.
A recent study published in Nature Medicine found coronavirus antibodies may last only two to three months after a person becomes infected with Covid-19. Researchers examined 37 asymptomatic people, those who never developed symptoms, in the Wanzhou District of China. They compared their antibody response to that of 37 people with symptoms.
Scientists conducting larger vaccine studies later this year hope to answer lingering questions about Covid-19 antibodies.
Pfizer said it expects to manufacture up to 100 million doses by the end of 2020 and potentially more than 1.2 billion doses by the end of 2021. The company intends to begin a mid-stage trial as early as this month.