This story is from August 10, 2020

Chandigarh: PGI to test antibody response in vaccine

One of the jobs of PGI during the clinical testing of Covid-19 vaccine candidate ‘Covidshield’ developed by Oxford University and pharmaceutical company Astra Zeneca will be to look into its immunogeneticity — antibody response. This will be part of the phase 2 and 3 trials for which the institute was selected among 17 others in the country. Not all the sites will evaluate immunogeneticity.
Chandigarh: PGI to test antibody response in vaccine
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CHANDIGARH: One of the jobs of PGI during the clinical testing of Covid-19 vaccine candidate ‘Covidshield’ developed by Oxford University and pharmaceutical company Astra Zeneca will be to look into its immunogeneticity — antibody response. This will be part of the phase 2 and 3 trials for which the institute was selected among 17 others in the country. Not all the sites will evaluate immunogeneticity.
The antibody response is crucial as it determines the efficacy of the vaccine.
Instead of the Elisa assay, CLIA (Chemiluminescence Immunoassays) shall be used to determine the antibody response once the volunteers are jabbed with Covidshield. “We have a fully automated CLIA technique which we had used for convalescent plasma therapy. It is more specific and sensitive than Elisa,” said Prof Mini P Singh, virologist at PGI and associated with the Oxford vaccine trials.
She said, “Initially, we will test for antibodies in PGI. But for further study of the neutralising antibody evaluation, samples shall be sent to NIV, Pune, which has the BS3 level facilities to deal with the live viruses."
The trials shall start by the third week of this month with around 250 volunteers. The crucial component will be immunogeneticity. “For this, we shall test the samples after a month of the shot. It takes around 4-6 weeks for the antibodies to respond. To understand if these antibodies are persistent, we will again evaluate after three months,” said Prof Singh.
An antibody test is designed to detect antibodies produced in response to a virus. The test relies on testing the blood to check for past infection. Antibodies are proteins that help fight off infections.
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About the Author
Shimona Kanwar

Shimona Kanwar is an assistant editor who joined The Times of India in 2005. She covers science and health, and prefers an interdisciplinary approach. She loves simplifying science stories, sheering them of jargon to ensure enjoyable reading.

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