London:Due to a decline in infection rate, the team at Oxford University developing a COVID-19 vaccine believe that the chances of the trial yielding 'no result' is now 50 percent, The Telegraph reported.
The University of Oxford last week announced that the advance human trial of the vaccine will involve up to 10,260 volunteers across the UK.
While explaining when the results of the trial will be available, the university said that to assess whether the vaccine works to protect from COVID-19, the statisticians in the team will compare the number of infections in the control group with the number of infections in the vaccinated group.
For this purpose, a small number of study participants must develop COVID-19.
Read |Virus vaccine trials continue at Oxford University
"How quickly we reach the numbers required will depend on the levels of virus transmission in the community. If transmission remains high, we may get enough data in a couple of months to see if the vaccine works, but if transmission levels drop, this could take up to 6 months," the University said.
This is the reason why recruitment of those who have a higher chance of being exposed to the SARS-CoV-2 virus is being prioritised, such as frontline healthcare workers, frontline support staff and public-facing key workers, to capture the efficacy data as quickly as possible.