Close
Almac
Achema middle east

Batavia and KU Leuven join forces to accelerate development of highly promising COVID-19 vaccine candidate

Note* - All images used are for editorial and illustrative purposes only and may not originate from the original news provider or associated company.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

– Access the Media Pack Now

– Book a Conference Call

Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Related stories

Sanofi to Buy Vaccine Developer Dynavax in a $2.5b Deal

The French pharma giant, Sanofi, has started a $15.50...

AstraZeneca Commits $100mn for Pan-KRAS Inhibitor by Jacobio

AstraZeneca has gone ahead and committed $100 million to...

Laboratory Equipment Outsourcing Through CDMOs: Strategic and Cost Implications

Outsourcing laboratory infrastructure to CDMOs offers pharma companies critical agility, transforming fixed capital costs into flexible operational expenses while accessing cutting-edge technology like Cryo-EM.
- Advertisement -

KU Leuven, a leading research institution and one of the top 50 universities in the world and Batavia Biosciences, a contract development and manufacturing organization focused on delivering sustainable manufacturing solutions in the field of vaccines and oncology, announce their partnership on the development of a vector based COVID-19 vaccine candidate.

The virology team at the KU Leuven Rega Institute for Medical Research, headed by Prof Dr Johan Neyts, has developed a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate consisting of an attenuated vector carrying the SARS-CoV-2 spike immunogen. The vector is derived from the live-attenuated yellow fever vaccine (YF17D strain), which is a proven safe and effective vaccine, used worldwide to protect more than 500 million people against yellow fever.

The YF17D-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate, tentatively named RegaVax, shows convincing pre-clinical immunogenicity and efficacy data in challenge studies, as recently published in Nature (Sanchez-Felipe et al., 2020). Based on this promising data the research group is now confident to start the next phase of development, heading towards preparation for clinical trials.

To support this activity, KU Leuven has partnered with Batavia Biosciences, a frontrunner in developing highly intensified and low-cost vaccine manufacturing processes. Batavia will leverage its vaccine development and manufacturing experience together with its high intensity HIP-Vax® manufacturing technology to develop a clinical manufacturing process for the vaccine candidate, deliver clinical product and prepare for large-scale commercial supply.

Prof Neyts (Head of the Virology research group at the KU Leuven Rega Institute) commented: “RegaVax is the only COVID-19 vaccine candidate based on the yellow fever vaccine. In preclinical models, for example with hamsters, one single dose appears to be highly efficient in protecting against infection with SARS-CoV-2. We hope that this vaccine, will, like the yellow fever vaccine on which it is based, provide, after a single dose, long-lasting protection against this coronavirus.”

Dr. Menzo Havenga (CEO, Batavia Biosciences) stated: “We are delighted to team up with the group of Prof Neyts as the preclinical data generated by the team at KU Leuven for this vaccine candidate look extremely promising.” Dr Christopher Yallop (COO, Batavia Biosciences) added: “Our HIP-Vax technology is ideally suited to develop and manufacture this vaccine rapidly and cost effectively and we are very much looking forward to work closely with the KU Leuven team to deliver the clinical product and help move this vaccine candidate to licensure.”

The partnership aims to deliver the clinical product and to commence clinical testing in 2021.

Latest stories

Related stories

Sanofi to Buy Vaccine Developer Dynavax in a $2.5b Deal

The French pharma giant, Sanofi, has started a $15.50...

AstraZeneca Commits $100mn for Pan-KRAS Inhibitor by Jacobio

AstraZeneca has gone ahead and committed $100 million to...

Laboratory Equipment Outsourcing Through CDMOs: Strategic and Cost Implications

Outsourcing laboratory infrastructure to CDMOs offers pharma companies critical agility, transforming fixed capital costs into flexible operational expenses while accessing cutting-edge technology like Cryo-EM.

Specialized Laboratory Equipment Requirements for Biologics and Biosimilar Development

The development of complex biological molecules requires a specialized toolkit distinct from traditional small-molecule chemistry. This article details the critical laboratory equipment—from advanced bioreactors to high-resolution characterization tools—that enables the precise engineering and rigorous analysis required for successful biologics and biosimilar innovation.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

– Access theMedia Pack Now

– Book a Conference Call

Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Translate »