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CoviVac (Russia COVID-19 vaccine)

CoviVac (Russian: КовиВак) is an inactivated virus-based COVID-19 vaccine developed by the Chumakov Centre,[1] which is an institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences.[2] It was approved for use in Russia in February 2021, being the third COVID-19 vaccine to get approval in Russia.[1] It obtained a permission for phase III clinical trial on 2 June 2021.[3]

This article is about the Russian vaccine. For other uses, see Covivac (disambiguation).

Medical use[edit]

The CoviVac shot is given in two doses, 14 days apart. It is transported and stored at normal refrigerated temperatures, of 2 to 8 degrees Celsius (35.6 to 46.4 Fahrenheit).[1]


Efficacy has not yet been established in a phase III clinical trial.

0.3–0.5 mg of (adjuvant)

aluminum hydroxide

0.5 ml or less of phosphate composed of disodium phosphate dihydrate, sodium dihydrogen phosphate dihydrate, sodium chloride, and water for injection

buffer solution

One dose of 0.5 ml is composed only of 3 μg or more of SARS-CoV-2 strain AYDAR-1 antigen inactivated by beta-propiolactone and the following excipients:[4]

Manufacturing[edit]

As an inactivated vaccine, CoviVac uses a more traditional technology that is similar to the inactivated polio vaccine. Initially, a sample of SARS-CoV-2 strain AYDAR-1 was isolated by the Chumakov Center at the Russian Academy of Sciences and used to grow large quantities of the virus using vero cells. From then on, the viruses are soaked in beta-propiolactone, which deactivates them by binding to their genes, while leaving other viral particles intact. The resulting inactivated viruses are then mixed with an aluminium-based adjuvant.[5]

History[edit]

Clinical trials[edit]

On September 21, 2020, phase I/II trials started and was expected to last through October 15, 2020.[6][7]


In early 2021, phase III trials started and is expected to end on 30 December 2022.[8]