Sask. vaccine manufacturing facility the first of its kind in Canada - Action News
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Sask. vaccine manufacturing facility the first of its kind in Canada

The Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO) at the University of Saskatchewan gave CBC Saskatchewan an exclusive advance behind the scenes tour of its now complete vaccine manufacturing centre in Saskatoon.

Plan is to be fully operational by the fourth quarter of 2023

Bioreactors inside the main production ballroom at VIDO are ready to take and perfect cultures from a small amount to a larger amount.
Bioreactors inside the main production ballroom at VIDO are ready to take and perfect cultures from a small amount to a larger amount. (Don Somers/CBC News)

Trina Racine walks from room to room, making sure we understand that these are sterile spaces with different kinds of pressure and air locks.

"We are trying to protect what we are making from ourselves," said Racine, the associate director of vaccine development at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO) at the University of Saskatchewan.

"We don't want to contaminate what we are making. But our larger Inter-Vac building, our containment level three facility, it's the opposite normally we are trying to protect ourselves from what we are working with," Racine said.

On Monday, CBC Saskatchewan was given advance access to Saskatoon's newly completed vaccine development facility.

Duringthe tour, Racine explained each room and piece of machinery with what seemed like a massive smile on her face. It's difficult to say for sure as masks are required inside the facility.

The $28 million vaccine development centre lives inside VIDO's Level 3containment facility. That distinction makes the facility the first of its kind in Canada. It is the country's largest containment facilityand one of only a few in the world. It was paid for through a combined effort bythe City of Saskatoon, the government of Saskatchewanand the federal government.

"It's really exciting and rewarding to see that finally this has now become reality and that soon we will be able to manufacture vaccines here at VIDO," said director and CEO Volker Gerdts.

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CBC Saskatchewan was given advance access to the newly completed vaccine development facility in Saskatoon.

VIDO's facility is unique because it can make both human and animal vaccines for potentially dangerous viruses, categorized up to Level 3. Eventually, VIDO would like to acquire Level 4statusand work with the most dangerous of pathogens.

Right now, the project is on apilot scale this allows for a quick transition from discovery research to clinical trials. And because it's all in the same place, everything happens under one roof.

Associate director of vaccine development Trina Racine guides CBC News through an exclusive behind the scenes tour of the now complete vaccine development centre at VIDO in Saskatoon. (Don Somers/CBC News)

The facility can also create any kind of vaccine, Gertds said, whether that is protein subunit, RNA, viral vectors, live or inactive vaccines.

However,commercial production is only approved for animal vaccines. For human intended vaccines, the approval stops atclinical trials unless there is an emergency.

"VIDO is not going to be a commercial vaccine manufacturer," he said. "We are a research organization and we really are focusing on manufacturing vaccines that were discovered in lab either here at VIDO or at the university or at other universities or small biotech companies who don't have the resources to build their own manufacturing facility."

Dr. Volker Gerdts in a lab at the University of Saskatchewan.
Dr. Volker Gerdts in a lab at the University of Saskatchewan. (VIDO-InterVac/University of Saskatchewan)

The facility's goal is to have between a 90or 100 day turnaround time for vaccines. The maximum capacity for production will depend on each vaccine's technology.

However, Gerdts said the facility could produce 40 million dosesof its own COVID-19 vaccine every year, which is currently in phase two of clinical trials.

Right now, the facilityis nowhere near ready for that. There is a long on-boarding (commissioning) process to make sure everything works the way it needs to. VIDO hope to have it fully functional by the fourth quarter of 2023.

A researcher's dream

For 20 years, working in the field of viruses and immunology was a way for VIDO virologist Alyson Kelvin to help people. Having this expanded facility is the cherry on top, she said.

"To have something where we can make a difference and without vaccine manufacturing capacity in Canada having that here in my own institution, is probably the most exciting point of my career," Kelvin said.

Kelvin is a member of the World Health Organization's committee on the SARS-CoV2 vaccine design. She has been involved in emerging virus research since 2003 when she participated in the response to the SARS-CoV epidemic in Toronto.

She is not the only scientist on the grounds of VIDO that is excited about the facility's potential.

VIDO research scientist Arinjay Banerjee says it's the potential opportunities while working with high containment pathogens that drew him to work at the facility. (Don Somers/CBC News)

Arinjay Banerjee was born in Calcutta, India but now lives and works in Saskatoon both as a lecturer and research scientist. He finished his doctoral research at the University of Saskatchewan in 2018, specifically looking at bat-borne zoonotic viruses.

"There are coronaviruses in wildlife reservoirs, especially in bats, that could make the jump into humans. We've known this for over a decade before COVID-19. What we now know is that viruses are extremely unpredictable and humans and scientists are extremely unprepared in dealing with these viruses. Hopefully we can change that," he said.

Banerjeeworked in Toronto during the pandemic. He says it was a combination of his history at the U of S and the opportunities possible with high containment pathogens at VIDO that brought him back to Saskatoon.

"I think this is the best place, certainly in Canada, and definitely one of the top on the planet to [study] emerging pathogens," he said.

Gerdts saidthat is what is helping recruitment and drawing scientists and the brightest minds in the world to the facility. Eight more scientists have been hired to work there over the last 15 months, he said.

Pandemic reveals gaps

According to Gerdts, the pandemic highlighted real gaps and shortages in Canada's vaccine research and manufacturing capacity.

"To hire new staff, it often took six months," he said. "It's challenging to find people who can work in these very unique conditions where you wear PPE. You can't go to the bathroom, you can't drink or anything. It's not an easy job."

Gerdts saidCanada needs to invest in training the next generation so that when another pandemic comes along we are better prepared.

The federal government is making an effort in that regard. Last year, it announced a biomanufacturing and life sciences strategy, which included $2.2 billion in funding for projects across the country. The goal is to ensure readiness for future pandemics and other health threats.