
COVID-19 Vaccine for Omicron Will Be Ready in March Says Pfizer
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla made the announcement in an interview.
In a
The
In a study published in
Investigators from the Ragon Institute, MIT, and Harvard created a “pseudovirus” version of Omicron that mimicked its mutations. In the lab,
The investigators found that all 3 vaccines in their primary series produced little to no effective protection against Omicron. They did see potent neutralization against Omicron in those who received an mRNA booster dose.
At the
“Omicron’s mutations present the virus with a double-edged sword: it’s got better at evading the immune system, but it might have lost some of its ability to cause severe disease,” lead investigator Ravi Gupta, PhD, MPH, professor at the Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Disease, University of Cambridge, said.
Gupta and his collaborators tested their pseudoviruses against blood samples from vaccinated individuals who had received 2 doses of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines.
They reported the new variant required around a 10-fold increase in the concentration of serum antibody to neutralize the variant as compared to the Delta variant. And, in the majority of individuals who were administered 2 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, they were not able to neutralize the virus. The investigators said the data were confirmed in live virus experiments.
Although the Omicron strain was shown to be better at evading vaccine-neutralizing antibodies in specific 2-dose vaccines, a silver lining was discovered when they applied a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to both groups.
“The Omicron variant appears to be much better than Delta at evading neutralizing antibodies in individuals who have received just two doses of the vaccine,” Gupta stated. “A third dose ‘booster’ with the Pfizer vaccine was able to overturn this in the short term, though we’d still expect a waning in immunity to occur over time.”
At the moment, public health strategy is for people to continue to get vaccinated whether it is the first series or booster doses.
Pfizer’s Bourla said the goal is to offer better protection against emerging variants, but for now, the booster dose appears to be the best way to prevent hospitalization and severe disease.
"The hope is that we will achieve something that will have way, way better protection particularly against infections, because the protection against the hospitalizations and the severe disease — it is reasonable right now, with the current vaccines as long as you are having let's say the third dose," Bourla said.
Newsletter
Stay ahead of emerging infectious disease threats with expert insights and breaking research. Subscribe now to get updates delivered straight to your inbox.