Israel to become first in world to test Oravax oral COVID-19 vaccine

Oravax Medical is gearing up to commence clinical trials at Tel Aviv Medical 
Center.

By MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN   JULY 22, 2021 
https://www.jpost.com/health-science/israel-to-become-first-in-world-to-test-oral-covid-19-vaccine-674563


Israel is about to become the first country in the world to test the oral 
COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oramed Pharmaceuticals, the company's CEO Nadav 
Kidron told The Jerusalem Post.

Oramed’s subsidiary, Oravax Medical, is gearing up to commence clinical trials 
of its vaccine at Sourasky Medical Center in Tel Aviv after receiving approval 
for its study protocol from the hospital’s Institutional Review Board. It is 
now waiting for approval from the Health Ministry, which is expected within a 
few weeks.

Oravax already completed GMP manufacturing in Europe of several thousand 
capsules that would be available for the Israeli trial and eventually in other 
countries.

Oramed is a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company based on technology developed 
by Jerusalem’s Hadassah-University Medical Center. In March, it announced a 
joint venture with India-based Premas Biotech to develop a novel oral vaccine. 
Together they formed Oravax.

The vaccine is based on Oramed’s “POD” oral delivery technology and Premas’s 
vaccine technology.

Oramed’s technology can be used to orally administer a number of protein-based 
therapies, which would otherwise be delivered by injection. Oramed is in the 
midst of a Phase III clinical trial through the US Food and Drug Administration 
of an oral insulin capsule for Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.

Premas has been working on developing a vaccine against the novel coronavirus 
since March.

The new Oravax vaccine candidate targets three structural proteins of the novel 
coronavirus, as opposed to the single spike protein targeted by the current 
Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, Kidron said.

As such, “this vaccine should be much more resistant to COVID-19 variants,” he 
said. “Even if the virus gets through one line, there is a second line, and if 
through the second line, there is a third.”

The vaccine is being tested in preclinical studies against COVID-19 variants, 
including the Delta one.

The company completed a pilot animal study and found that the vaccine promoted 
the development of Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies and Immunoglobulin A 
(IgA). IgA is necessary for longer-term immunity.

The protocol for the inaugural Phase I/II trial that the company hopes to move 
forward with at Sourasky would involve 24 volunteers who have not yet been 
inoculated with another vaccine. Half of the group would take one capsule, and 
the other half would take two, Kidron said, adding that there is no placebo 
group because the goal is to measure the level of antibodies and other immunity 
indicators.

“The idea here is that we want to show proof of concept: that it works for 
people,” he said. “I pray and hope that we will. Imagine that we could give 
someone an oral vaccine and they are vaccinated. This would be a revolution for 
the entire world.”

With proof of the concept, “the whole world opens up,” Kidron said.

“An oral COVID-19 vaccine would eliminate several barriers to rapid, wide-scale 
distribution, potentially enabling people to take the vaccine themselves at 
home,” he told the Post. “While ease of administration is critical today to 
accelerate inoculation rates, an oral vaccine could become even more valuable 
in the case that a COVID-19 vaccine may be recommended annually like the 
standard flu shot.”

The advantages of an oral vaccine go beyond safety and efficacy because oral 
medications tend to have fewer side effects, Kidron said.

The vaccine can be shipped at refrigerator temperatures and even stored at room 
temperature, “making it logistically easier to get it anywhere around the 
world,” he added.

Finally, an oral vaccine would not require professional administration.

The Phase I/II trial is expected to take around six weeks from the time of 
recruitment.

If the trial is successful, Kidron said he plans to put the vaccine on an 
accelerated road to receive emergency-use approval in the countries that need 
it most, such as those in South America that have not been able to acquire 
enough vaccines to inoculate their populations.

The company would hold its Phase III trial with a limited number of volunteers 
and look for first approval in one of these “emerging markets,” Kidron said, 
and only later seek US Food and Drug Administration authorization.

“Israel and the US and some of the other richer countries were the first to get 
Pfizer and Moderna,” he said. “But it looks to me like the people behind in the 
race will take over by being the first ones to get the oral vaccine.”

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