SOUTHAMPTON DOCTORS are calling on adults to join trials of a new Covid-19 vaccine.

Made by biotech company Valneva, this vaccine is said to use a proven technology already used in existing vaccines used for prevention of diseases such as flu, Japanese encephalitis, tick borne encephalitis, polio, and rabies.

In doing so, it takes a “different approach” to the recently licensed Oxford-AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, potentially providing additional resilience against new variants.

These early phase 1 and 2 studies are testing how well the UK-developed vaccine triggers the body’s immune defences against coronavirus, and its safety in 150 healthy adults aged 18-55.

Southampton doctors are now asking the city and region to help out and sign up.

Professor Saul Faust from the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) and the University of Southampton said: “It’s vital we continue to test new vaccines as they become available.

“As the new variants have shown, coronavirus keeps moving the goalposts and it’s unlikely that there will be a single solution that protects everyone and gets us out of this.

“Different vaccines work in different ways and we need the public’s help to understand how well each one protects us and prevents transmission, particularly which ones are most appropriate for different groups of people.

“Searching ‘covid19 study registry” and signing up is a positive step anyone can take to help the NHS tackle the virus and get us all out of the pandemic.”

If successful, these early trials are expected to pave the way for larger trials involving more than 4,000 volunteers UK-wide, testing two doses of the vaccine in in those aged 18-65 and the over 65s.

Early access to 60 million doses of this vaccine, subject to successful trials, has already been secured by the UK Government, with up to 250 million vaccine doses to be supplied worldwide.

This is the fifth NIHR-supported vaccine to enter clinical trials in the UK, alongside Oxford/AstraZeneca, Imperial College London, Novavax and Janssen.

Some volunteers taking part in the latest clinical trials came through from the NHS COVID-19 Vaccine Research Registry.

This enables the UK public to support the national effort to speed up vaccine research.

Over 365,000 people have signed up to the Registry, giving their permission to be contacted about taking part in vaccine research.