Many are concerned that the various Covid-19 vaccines will not be able to hinder the various mutations of the virus. However, Pfizer and BioNTech have shown that their vaccine will ‘protect against the new variant’ that emerged in the United Kingdom recently. Bloomberg reports that the study showed that ‘antibodies in the blood of people who had been vaccinated were able to neutralise a version of the mutant virus created in the lab’. Despite this, BioNTech has said that they will be ready to adapt the vaccine, should it be needed in the future. This, says Bloomberg, may be necessary, as further strains emerge – such as the 501.V2 variant that materialised in South Africa. Studies done on the SA strain has raised concern, with scientists finding that ‘half of the blood samples from a handful of patients who already had Covid-19 donât have the antibodies needed to protect against the South African variant’. â Jarryd Neves
Pfizer-BioNTech shot likely to foil mutant, new study shows
By Naomi Kresge and Janice Kew
(Bloomberg) –Â Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE built the case that their Covid-19 vaccine will protect against the new variant of the coronavirus that emerged in the U.K. with results of another lab trial.
Like previous work out of the University of Texas Medical Branch, the results published on Wednesday showed that antibodies in the blood of people who had been vaccinated were able to neutralize a version of the mutant virus that was created in the lab. The study was published on preprint server BioRxiv prior to peer review.
Unlike the earlier study, which focused on one crucial mutation, the new research tested all 10 mutations located on the virusâs spike protein, which helps it bind to cells in the host.
Antibodies in the blood of 16 volunteers in a previous German trial of the vaccine were just as effective against the lab-created mutant strain as they were against the original virus. The result âmakes it very unlikely that the U.K. variant viruses will escapeâ protection from the vaccine, wrote the research team, led by BioNTech Chief Executive Officer Ugur Sahin.
The BioNTech team is nevertheless ready to adapt the vaccine if needed in the future, it said. That could become necessary to protect against other strains amid evidence another variant that emerged in South Africa may be harder to check.
A separate study on that strain raised concern. Scientists found that half of the blood samples from a handful of patients who already had Covid-19 donât have the antibodies needed to protect against the South African variant, which is spreading around the globe.
The findings, from South Africaâs National Institute for Communicable Diseases, suggest that those individuals may no longer be protected from re-infection. In the other half, antibody levels were reduced and the risk of re-infection couldnât be determined, according to the institute. The findings werenât peer-reviewed and were based on a small sample size.
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