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Covaxin Shows Promising Results, No Adverse Effects Reported: Phase 1 Trial Results

Bharat Biotech’s Covid-19 vaccine induced robust binding and neutralised antibody responses interim findings of phase-1 clinical trials indicated

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Covaxin Shows Promising Results, No Adverse Effects Reported: Phase 1 Trial Results
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The interim findings of phase-1 clinical trials of Covid-19 vaccine Covaxin, indigenously being developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration with the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), indicated that it was well tolerated in all dose groups with no serious or adverse events.

The vaccine induced robust binding and neutralised antibody responses in a manner similar to what was observed in the convalescent serum collected from patients who had recovered from Covid-19, the findings claimed, which appeared on medRxiv, a preprint server.

A preprint is a version of a scientific manuscript posted on a public server prior to formal peer review.

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One adverse event was reported, which was found to be unrelated to vaccination, the findings further indicated.

The findings were based on double-blind randomised controlled phase-1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of Covaxin (BBV152).

The document mentions that BBV152 is stored between 2 degrees Celsius and 8 degrees Celsius, which is compatible with all national immunisation programme cold chain requirements and further efficacy trials are underway.

According to the "A Phase 1: Safety and Immunogenicity Trial of an Inactivated SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine BBV152", after the first dose of vaccination, local and systemic adverse events were predominantly mild or moderate in severity and resolved rapidly, without any prescribed medication. A similar trend was observed after the second shot was administered. Pain at the injection site was the most common local adverse event.

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"One serious adverse event was reported. The participant was vaccinated on July 30. Five days later, the participant reported symptoms of Covid-19 and was found to be positive for SARS-CoV-2," the report stated.

"The symptoms were mild in nature, but the patient was admitted to the hospital on August 15. The participant was discharged on August 22 following a negative nucleic acid result. The event was not causally associated with the vaccine," the report further added.

To ensure generalisability, the trial was conducted on volunteers from diverse geographic locations and socioeconomic conditions, enrolling 375 participants across 11 hospitals.

"Despite the fact that enrolment occurred during a nationwide lockdown, which led to several operational challenges, the overall participant retention rate was 97 per cent," the findings indicated.

The sample size was intentionally large to enable the inference of meaningful conclusions regarding immunogenicity and safety, the document said.

BBV152 induced robust binding and neutralising antibody responses that were similar to those induced by other SARS-CoV-2 inactivated vaccine candidates, it said.

Two doses of the vaccine were administered to volunteers at a volume of 0.5 mL/dose intramuscularly on days zero and 14. The follow-up visits were scheduled on days 7, 28, 42, 104, and 194.

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