Russia's Sputnik V Vaccine Has 92% Efficacy In Trial
Russia's
Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine gives around 92% protection against
Covid-19, late stage trial results published in The Lancet reveal.
It has also
been deemed to be safe - and offer complete protection against hospitalisation
and death.
The vaccine
was initially met with some controversy after being rolled out before the final
trial data had been released.
But
scientists said its benefit has now been demonstrated.
It joins the
ranks of proven vaccines alongside Pfizer, Oxford/AstraZeneca, Moderna and
Janssen.
The Sputnik
vaccine works in a similar way to the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab developed in the
UK, and the Janssen vaccine developed in Belgium.
It uses a
cold-type virus, engineered to be harmless, as a carrier to deliver a small
fragment of the coronavirus to the body.
Safely
exposing the body to part of the virus's genetic code in this way allows it to
recognise the threat and learn to fight it off, without risking becoming ill.
After being
vaccinated, the body starts to produce antibodies specially tailored to the
coronavirus.
This means
the immune system is primed to fight coronavirus when if it encounters it for
real.
It can be
stored at temperatures of between 2 and 8C degrees (a standard fridge is
roughly 3-5C degrees) making it easier to transport and store.
But unlike
other similar vaccines, the Sputnik jab uses two slightly different versions of
the vaccine for the first and second dose - given 21 days apart.
They both
target the coronavirus's distinctive "spike", but use different
vectors - the neutralised virus that carries the spike to the body.
The idea is
that using two different formulas boosts the immune system even more than using
the same version twice - and may give longer-lasting protection.
As well as
proving effective, it was also safe with no serious reactions linked to the
vaccine during the trial.
Some side
effects to a vaccine are expected but these are usually mild, including a sore
arm, tiredness and a bit of a temperature.
And there
were no deaths or serious illness in the vaccinated group linked to the jab.
As well as
Russia, the vaccine is being used in a number of other places including:
Argentina
Palestinian
territories
Venezuela
Hungary
UAE
Iran
In a comment
published alongside the Lancet paper, Profs Ian Jones and Polly Roy said:
"The development of the Sputnik V vaccine has been criticised for unseemly
haste, corner cutting, and an absence of transparency.
"But
the outcome reported here is clear and the scientific principle of vaccination
is demonstrated, which means another vaccine can now join the fight to reduce
the incidence of Covid-19".
They pointed
out the vaccine had good effect in all age groups, and reduced the seriousness
of the disease after one dose.
This was
"particularly encouraging" while supply of the vaccine is limited,
they added.
The authors
of the Lancet paper pointed out the analysis only included symptomatic cases of
Covid, and more work would need to be done to understand whether it stops even
asymptomatic cases, and prevents the virus from being passed on by vaccinated
people.
Dr Julian
Tang, a clinical virologist at the University of Leicester, said: "Despite
the earlier misgivings about the way this Russian Sputnik V vaccine was rolled
out more widely - ahead of sufficient Phase 3 trial data - this approach has
been justified to some extent now.
"Such
pandemic-related vaccine rollout compromises have, to be fair, been adopted in
the UK vaccination programme also - with the extended intervals between the
first and second doses.
"So we
should be more careful about being overly critical about other countries'
vaccine designs."
No comments