Osivax today announced that it had completed enrollment in its Phase 1 clinical trial with OVX033, the company’s broad-spectrum vaccine candidate against sarbecoviruses.
OVX033 is a first-in-class coronavirus vaccine candidate that targets the nucleocapsid (N), a highly conserved internal antigen. Osivax is creating a revolutionary universal sarbecovirus vaccine that will uniquely empower both the B-cell immune response and the T-cell immune response.
Unlike surface antigens such as Spike (S), N is much less likely to mutate, providing a broader and more universal immune response to induce broad-spectrum protection against all current and future variants of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus and against future pandemic coronavirus strains.
“Sarbecoviruses remain a threat as evidenced by the (recent) pandemic, which continues to have long-term consequences for global health. By completing enrollment for our Phase 1 trial with OVX033, we are taking a significant step forward in addressing the need for a broad-spectrum vaccine to protect against these rapidly mutating viruses,” said Dr. Nicola Groth, CMO of Osivax, in a press release.
Osivax’s oligoDOMTM technology enables the design and production of a recombinant version of the nucleocapsid, which self-assembles into a nanoparticle and thus triggers powerful T- and B-cell immune responses.
The study is designed to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of OVX033 at three dose levels. To date, no safety concerns or signals have been observed at any dose level, justifying a dose escalation up to the maximum dose level of 500µg.
The single-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 1 clinical study is being conducted at the Clinical Investigation Center in Vaccinology Cochin Pasteur in Cochin Hospital in Paris.
The French government supports this project through France 2030.
According to a recent study published by the journal Nature, coronaviruses (CoVs) are a group of enveloped viruses belonging to the Coronaviridae and currently contain four known genera: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta-CoVs. Sarbecovirus, a subgenus within Beta-CoV, has resulted in the emergence of the highly pathogenic human viruses SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2.