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Safety and immunogenicity of intranasal parainfluenza virus type 5 (PIV5)-vectored COVID-19 vaccine in adults and teens in an open-label phase 1 trial

SCIENCE ADVANCES. 2025-07; 
Paul Spearman, Hong Jin, Peng Xiao, Kristeene Knopp, Henry Radziewicz, Marinka Tellier, Sasha E Larsen, Bryan J Berube, Xiao Song, Jamie Kidd, Karnail Singh, Zhuo Li, Maria Cristina Gingerich, Samuel Wu, Susan P John, Angela Branche, Ann R Falsey, Rhea Coler, Francois J Villinger, Biao He Infectious Diseases, Cincinnati Children's Hospital and University of Cincinnati, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
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Abstract

COVID-19 continues causing substantial mortality despite existing FDA-approved COVID-19 vaccines. An effective COVID-19 vaccine providing durable immunity with minimal reactogenicity is needed. CVXGA1, a PIV5-based intranasal COVID-19 vaccine expressing the Spike (S) protein of SARS-CoV-2, was evaluated in this phase 1 study in adults and teens. CVXGA1 was well tolerated without serious adverse events (AEs) or fever reported. Solicited local and systemic AEs were mostly mild. CVXGA1 elicited S-specific serum and mucosal antibodies and CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in all groups. Significantly lower rates of symptomatic COVID-19 infection were reported in groups receiving high-dose CVXGA1 (HD) compared t... More

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