The vaccine causes few side effects and provokes a response in
T-cells that target the virus within 14 days of the first dose and a protective
antibody response within 28 days of the booster dose.
The University of
Oxford confirmed that the Covid-19
vaccine it’s developing with AstraZeneca Plc produced strong immune
responses in older adults in an early study, with pivotal findings from the
final phase of trials expected in the coming weeks.
The results,
published Thursday in The Lancet medical journal, shed more light on
preliminary data released in recent months showing the experimental shot
generated an immune response in older people, who are at highest risk of severe
illness. Researchers are still eagerly awaiting late-stage trial results that
will show whether the Astra-Oxford
vaccine can meet the high bar set by front-runners Pfizer Inc. and Moderna
Inc.
Those findings
will follow a flurry of positive news on the vaccine front. Pfizer, working
with Germany’s BioNTech SE, said Wednesday that a final analysis of trial data
showed its Covid vaccine was 95% effective, paving the way for the company to
apply for the first US regulatory authorisation for a coronavirus shot within
days. Moderna’s appears equally effective.
The results of
Oxford’s phase 2 study show that the vaccine is better tolerated in older
people and produces a similar immune response in old and young adults. The
study involved 560 adults, including 240 over the age of 70. That follows
findings in older participants unveiled last month and data in July that showed
the vaccine generated robust immune responses in adults ages 18 to 55. Older
patients have been hardest hit by the pandemic, with the vast majority of
deaths occurring in those over 60.
“Inducing robust
immune responses in older adults has been a long-standing challenge,” Angela
Minassian, an investigator at Oxford, wrote in a statement. “To show this
vaccine technology is able to induce these responses -- in the age group most
at risk from severe Covid-19 disease -- offers hope that vaccine efficacy will
be similar in younger and older adults.”
No comments:
Post a Comment