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J&J hopes to start human trials for coronavirus vaccine in November


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J&J hopes to start human trials for coronavirus vaccine in November

Johnson & Johnson hopes to begin human clinical trials on a COVID-19 vaccine in early November, its chief scientific officer, Dr. Paul Stoffels, told CNBC on Tuesday. “We are making significant progress and very, very fast,” Stoffels said on “The Exchange.” Stoffel’s comments come one day after the first early-stage human trials for a potential vaccine to…

J&J hopes to start human trials for coronavirus vaccine in November

Johnson & Johnson hopes to begin human clinical trials on a COVID-19 vaccine in early November, its chief scientific officer, Dr. Paul Stoffels, told CNBC on Tuesday. 

“We are making significant progress and very, very fast,” Stoffels said on “The Exchange.” 

Stoffel's comments come one day after the first early-stage human trials for a potential vaccine to prevent COVID-19 began in Seattle. The National Institutes of Health is working with biotech company Moderna on the vaccine development. 

Regeneron on Tuesday said it aims to have a potential treatment for the coronavirus ready to start human clinical trials by early summer

There is no known treatment for COVID-19, which has infected more than 190,000 globally and killed more than 7,500, according to Johns Hopkins University data

Johnson & Johnson's work on a vaccine began in January. Stoffels said the drug maker will probably have selected a candidate vaccine by the end of March, setting the stage for pre-clinical to begin. 

At the same time, Johnson & Johnson will be putting processes in place to allow for the widespread production of the vaccine, “in order to have large quantities available early next year,” Stoffels said. 

Johnson & Johnson is using the same vaccine platform it most recently used for Ebola, Stoffels said, “so we can plug in the vaccine into an existing system and that allows us to go very fast with very good information.” 

The development of COVID-19 vaccine is “is an urgent public health priority,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Monday in a statement regarding the Phase 1 trial in Seattle. 

That trial, which Fauci said was launched in “record speed,” will test the vaccine on 45 males and non-pregnant females ages 18 to 55, according to the NIH's website.

The number of coronavirus cases outside of mainland China is now greater than the number there, where the disease was discovered in late December. 

There are more than 81,000 confirmed cases in China, nearly 28,000 in Italy and more than 16,000 in Iran. The U.S. has more than 5,200. 

Although expectations are high, doctors have sought to keep expectations low for how quickly a vaccine can get to market. The process of developing, testing and reviewing potential vaccines is complex and lengthy, taking months or even years, global health experts say.

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— CNBC's Berkeley Lovelace Jr. contributed to this report. 

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