This Phase 2 parallel-group, randomized, double-blind, dose-finding study involved 415 healthy adults at three U.S. sites. Participants were assigned at random to one of several doses and regimens, including a single dose.
The vaccine candidate was well-tolerated across all study arms and no significant vaccine-related safety concerns have been identified in analyses to date. Solicited adverse event profiles were similar across groups and mostly mild or moderate. The most frequent was local injection site pain.
Virus-like particle (VLP) vaccines are multi-protein structures that mimic the organization and conformation of naturally occurring viruses without the viral genome. Studies have shown that in general, other VLP vaccines are highly immunogenic, safe, and typically elicit high titer neutralizing antibodies, which are needed to protect against chikungunya virus.1 There is currently no vaccine, VLP or otherwise, to prevent chikungunya virus infection.
The CHIKV VLP vaccine candidate is licensed from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. It received FDA Fast Track designation in May 2018 and EMA PRIME designation in September 2019.
Investor Contact:
Robert G. Burrows
Vice President, Investor Relations
240-631-3280
[email protected]
Media Contact:
Lynn Kieffer
Vice President, Corporate Communications
240-631-3391
[email protected]
__________________________
1 Akahata W, Yang ZY, Andersen H, et al. A virus-like particle vaccine for epidemic chikungunya virus protects nonhuman primates against infection. Nat Med 2010; 16: 334–38.
© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.
