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Coronavirus Vaccine Could Be Introduced In ‘First Half Of Next Year’, Scientist Says

But any potential vaccine would have to be released 'very cautiously', the Imperial College London professor warned.
A researcher working on a vaccine for Covid-19 in a research lab at Imperial College School of Medicine.
TOLGA AKMEN via Getty Images
A researcher working on a vaccine for Covid-19 in a research lab at Imperial College School of Medicine.

A Covid-19 vaccine could be rolled out across the country in the first half of 2021 if trials are successful, a scientist leading research in the UK has said.

Professor Robin Shattock, who heads a team developing a vaccine at Imperial College London, said that enough doses would be available for everyone in the UK if trials go “really well”.

But he warned there was “no certainty” that any of the vaccines currently being developed will be successful, as it is dependent on the level of immunity needed to prevent infection.

Appearing on Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday, he said: “So we anticipate if everything goes really well that we’ll get an answer as to whether it works by early next year.

“And we have put in place the infrastructure to make that vaccine for the whole of the UK.

“So, assuming that the funding is there to purchase that vaccine, we could have that vaccine rolled out across the UK in the first half of next year.”

Some 15 volunteers have been vaccinated for the trial so far, which will be ramped up to include another 200-300 participants in the “coming weeks”, he said.

Scientists developing a vaccine currently do not know what level of immunity people need to prevent infection, which makes the chance of success “difficult to predict”, according to Shattock.

“If you only need a very small amount of immunity, I suspect most of the vaccines that are being developed will actually work, but if you need a very strong immune response or particular quality of immune response, we’ll see that actually it will be shaking out to some of these candidates,” he told the programme.

“We hope we will be the candidate, one of the candidates, that is successful, but there’s no certainty with any individual approach.”

Although development is also taking place at the University of Oxford, Shattock said that a vaccine being made available by September “feels very optimistic” – partly due to the number of infections falling in the UK.

Asked if there was a chance a vaccine might not work, he replied: “Now I think that’s a very low, low risk.

“I think we’re very lucky in the UK that we have two very strong candidates, the one from Imperial, the one from Oxford, and so we’re pretty well placed, but there’s still not a certainty that either of those two will work.”

Due to the urgency of the coronavirus crisis, any vaccine will need to be introduced “very cautiously”, according to Shattock, as the normal full trials will not take place.

“I think the wire pressure is actually there’s such a push to develop a vaccine that normally, we would study a vaccine for two years before we made it widely available to the general public,” he told the programme.

“And of course, we won’t have two years of safety for this vaccine or any of the vaccines that are being developed.

“And so they still will need to be introduced very cautiously, with long-term follow up, as that pressure to get a vaccine in and to get economies up and running is really very strong.”

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