City
Epaper

UK human 'challenge trial' launches to study COVID-19 reinfection

By ANI | Updated: April 19, 2021 21:15 IST

A year-long trial launched Monday to study how the immune system reacts in people contracting coronavirus for the second time.

Open in App

A year-long trial launched Monday to study how the immune system reacts in people contracting coronavirus for the second time.

CNN reported that volunteers in the UK who've previously had Covid-19 will be deliberately infected with the virus to discover what it may mean for developing immunity.

The "challenge trial" will happen under carefully controlled conditions, with treatments on hand in case volunteers becomes ill, the team at the University of Oxford said.

"Challenge studies tell us things that other studies cannot because, unlike natural infection, they are tightly controlled. When we re-infect these participants, we will know exactly how their immune system has reacted to the first Covid infection, exactly when the second infection occurs, and exactly how much virus they got," Dr. Helen McShane, a vaccine specialist at the University of Oxford, said in a statement.

CNN reported that the first phase of the study, starting this month, will find the lowest dose of virus that can infect half of the coronavirus survivors without causing symptoms.

Then all 64 volunteers will be infected with that dose. Their immune responses will be studied. Participants will initially be monitored 24/7 for two weeks while they are in quarantine in a specially designed hospital suite where they will undergo medical tests, including CT scans of the lungs and MRI scans of the heart.

Any volunteers who develop symptoms will be treated with Regeneron's monoclonal antibody treatment and discharged from quarantine only when they are at no risk of infecting others.

"One of the things we can determine with this study is how long that protection lasts. Once we understand exactly the immune response that protects against second infection, we can then use that information to develop vaccines more quickly, test vaccines more quickly, and understand who is protected and who isn't from this virus," McShane said in an interview with Radio 4 on Monday as reported by CNN.

McShane said they'll be recruiting people who are young and healthy - ages 18 to 30 -- with the "lowest possible risk of serious consequences from this infection."

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Helen McShaneCNNUniversity Of OxfordFacebook groupTwitter sportsCambridge university and public health englandInternational data corp.State for international tradeState sportsU.s. newsAbc news' instagram
Open in App

Related Stories

Yash Suryavanshi’s MBA application got selected in University Of Oxford

InternationalJim Acosta Expected to Leave CNN Network After Removal from Weekday Time Slot

InternationalBiden vs Trump Presidential Debate 2024: Donald Trump Declared Clear Winner of First US Election Debate, Joe Biden Polls at 33%

TechnologyTikTok Hack: Cyberattack Targeted Brands and Celebrity Accounts, Including CNN, Says Chinese App

InternationalIsrael-Hamas War: Multiple Explosions Reported in Rafah Area of Southern Gaza

International Realted Stories

InternationalSouth Korea kick starts official campaign for Presidential elections

InternationalPakistan labels Hafiz Abdur Rauf, who led state funeral of terrorists, a 'family man'

InternationalDonald Trump pledges to cut US prescription drug prices by 80pc

InternationalChina, US agreed to establish economic and trade consultation mechanism: Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng

InternationalZelensky says willing to meet Putin in Turkey