Pharma Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedCrucell/Aeras Start Turberculosis Vaccine Clinical Trial
Worldwide Biotech, Dec 1, 2006
Dutch biotechnology company Crucell N.V. (Euronext, NASDAQ: CRXL; Swiss Exchange: CRX) has started the phase I clinical trial of the AdVac-based tuberculosis vaccine it is developing in partnership with The AERAS Global TB Vaccine Foundation.
The clinical trial will be an open-label study that will test the vaccine in a dose-escalation trial involving 24 healthy volunteers. The Phase I trial will be funded and managed by Aeras through a Contract Research Organization (CRO), PRA Clinical Pharmacology Center in Lenexa, Kansas, USA. The main parameters under examination will be safety, tolerability and immunogenicity.
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"We are very proud to join with Aeras in applying our AdVac technology to the vital task of finding new TB vaccines," said Crucell's Chief Scientific Officer, Dr Jaap Goudsmit.
Dr. Jerald C. Sadoff, president and CEO of Aeras, added: "The start of this Phase I trial is important to our overall goal of developing a new vaccine to help eliminate the current TB pandemic."
The second-generation Ad35 vector applied in the Crucell-Aeras TB program is extremely suitable for vaccine production on PER.C6 cell culture at scale. The production scale potential of the PER.C6 cell line has been demonstrated in an unprecedented successful bioreactor run of 20,000 liters. Such highly productive systems are particularly important in the case of poverty-related diseases such as HIV, malaria and TB, when 10-100 millions of doses need to be manufactured while keeping costs relatively low.
About tuberculosis Tuberculosis is the world's second deadliest infectious disease behind AIDS, with 8 to 9 million new cases discovered each year. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), nearly 2 million people die from TB each year. One third of the world's population has been infected with the TB bacillus and current treatment takes 6-9 months. Failure to comply with drug treatment breeds drug resistance, which is rising dangerously in many parts of the world. The current TB vaccine is over 80 years old and has limited effect in childhood and no protection against TB for adolescents and adults.
About AdVac technology and Ad35
AdVac technology is a vaccine technology developed by Crucell and is considered to play an important role in the fight against emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, and in biodefense. The technology supports the practice of inserting genetic material from the disease-causing virus or parasite into a "vehicle" called a vector, which then delivers the immunogenic material directly to the immune system. Most vectors are based on an adenovirus, such as the virus that causes the common cold. The AdVac technology is specifically designed to manage the problem of pre-existing immunity in humans against the most commonly used recombinant vaccine vector, adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5), without compromising large-scale production capabilities or the immunogenic properties of Ad5. AdVac technology is based on adenovirus vectors that do not regularly occur in the human population, such as Ad35. In contrast to the AdVac vectors, antibodies to Ad5 are widespread among people of all ages and are known to lower the immune response to Ad5-based vaccines, thereby impairing the efficacy of these vaccines. All vaccine candidates based on AdVac are produced using Crucell's PER.C6 production technology.
About PER.C6 technology
Crucell's PER.C6 technology is a cell line developed for the large-scale manufacture of biopharmaceutical products including vaccines. The production scale potential of the PER.C6 cell line has been demonstrated in an unprecedented successful bioreactor run of 20,000 liters. Compared to conventional production technologies, the strengths of the PER.C6 technology lie in its excellent safety profile, scalability and productivity under serum-free culture conditions. These characteristics, combined with its ability to support the growth of both human and animal viruses, make PER.C6 technology the biopharmaceutical production technology of choice for Crucell's current and potential pharmaceutical and biotechnology partners.
About Aeras
The Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation is a non-profit organization working as a Product Development Partnership to develop new tuberculosis vaccines and ensure that they are distributed to all who need them around the world. Dr Sadoff has overseen FDA licensure of five vaccines and worked on the research and development of numerous other vaccine candidates while at Merck and the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. Aeras is primarily funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and also receives important support from the Government of Denmark, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, and the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Aeras is based in Rockville, Maryland where it recently opened a $10 million state-of-the-art manufacturing and laboratory facility.
For more information, visit http://www.aeras.org.
About Crucell
Crucell N.V. (Euronext, NASDAQ: CRXL; Swiss Exchange: CRX) is a biotechnology company focused on research, development and worldwide marketing of vaccines and antibodies that prevent and treat infectious diseases. Its vaccines are sold in public and private markets worldwide. Crucell's core portfolio includes a vaccine against hepatitis B, a fully-liquid vaccine against five important childhood diseases, and a virosome-adjuvanted vaccine against influenza. Crucell also markets travel vaccines, such as the only oral anti-typhoid vaccine and the only aluminum-free hepatitis A vaccine on the market. The company has a broad development pipeline, with several Crucell products based on its unique PER.C6 production technology. The company licenses this and other technologies to the biopharmaceutical industry. Important partners and licensees include DSM Biologics, sanofi aventis, GSK and Merck & Co. Crucell is headquartered in Leiden (the Netherlands), with subsidiaries in Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Korea and the US. The company employs about 900 people.
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