Moderna Vaccine Appears To Work Against Variants
Moderna's
Covid vaccine appears to work against new, more infectious variants of the
pandemic virus found in the UK and South Africa, say scientists from the US
pharmaceutical company.
Early
laboratory tests suggest antibodies triggered by the vaccine can recognise
and fight the new variants.
More studies
are needed to confirm this is true for people who have been vaccinated.
The new
variants have been spreading fast in a number of nations.
They have
undergone changes or mutations that mean they can infect human cells more
easily than the original version of coronavirus that started the pandemic.
Experts
think the UK strain, which emerged in September, may be up to 70% more
transmissible.
Current
vaccines were designed around earlier variants, but scientists believe they
should still work against the new ones, although perhaps not quite as well.
There are already some early results that suggest the Pfizer vaccine
protects against the new UK variant.
For the
Moderna study, researchers looked at blood samples taken from eight people who
had received the recommended two doses of the Moderna vaccine.
The findings are
yet to be peer reviewed, but suggest immunity from the vaccine recognises the
new variants.
Neutralising
antibodies, made by the body's immune system, stop the virus from entering
cells.
Blood
samples exposed to the new variants appeared to have sufficient antibodies to
achieve this neutralising effect, although it was not as strong for the South
Africa variant as for the UK one.
Moderna says
this could mean that protection against the South Africa variant might
disappear more quickly.
Prof
Lawrence Young, a virus expert at Warwick Medical School in the UK, said this
would be concerning.
Moderna is
currently testing whether giving a third booster shot might be beneficial.
Like other
scientists, the company is also investigating whether redesigning the vaccine
to be a better match for the new variants will be beneficial.
Stephane
Bancel, chief executive officer of Moderna, said the company believed it was
"imperative to be proactive as the virus evolves".
UK
regulators have already approved Moderna's vaccine for rollout on the NHS, but
the 17m pre-ordered doses are not expected to arrive until Spring.
The vaccine
works in a similar way to the Pfizer one already being used in the UK.
More than
6.3 million people in the UK have already received a first dose of either the
Pfizer or the AstraZeneca vaccine.
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