> rather than producing them outside the body and then injecting them
That's not what the Oxford/AZ vaccine does, is it? From what I understand, it's a viral vector vaccine engineered to deliver DNA that encodes the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into human cells and induce them to express the protein, stimulating the immune response.
The plan was never to introduce spike protein "produced outside the body." The mechanism of action is getting the body to produce spike protein and learn to attack it as foreign. If the Oxford/AZ vaccine doesn't "take advantage of your own cells to produce the spike protein," I don't know what does.
Yes, the ChAdOx is an adenovirus carrier (chimp? to minimize human pre-infection) while Moderna and BioNTech as the parent states involve injection of mRNA (not DNA although there are other vaccines that do that) lipid particles that human cells then generate spike protein to simulate viral infection.
There are still other attenuated virus and other vaccines under development, they just haven't reached Phase III. Novavax even does something similar to what you describe (spike proteins with adjuvant), but it's also not past Phase I/II.
That's not what the Oxford/AZ vaccine does, is it? From what I understand, it's a viral vector vaccine engineered to deliver DNA that encodes the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into human cells and induce them to express the protein, stimulating the immune response.
The plan was never to introduce spike protein "produced outside the body." The mechanism of action is getting the body to produce spike protein and learn to attack it as foreign. If the Oxford/AZ vaccine doesn't "take advantage of your own cells to produce the spike protein," I don't know what does.
https://labblog.uofmhealth.org/rounds/top-5-covid-19-vaccine...