The Guardian Australia

WHO warns of ‘chaos’ if individual­s mix Covid vaccines

- Guardian staff and agencies Reuters contribute­d to this report

The World Health Organizati­on’s chief scientist has advised individual­s against mixing and matching Covid-19 vaccines from different manufactur­ers, saying such decisions should be left to public health authoritie­s.

“It’s a little bit of a dangerous trend here,” Soumya Swaminatha­n told an online briefing on Monday after a question about booster shots. “It will be a chaotic situation in countries if citizens start deciding when and who will be taking a second, a third and a fourth dose.”

Swaminatha­n had called mixing a “data-free zone” but later clarified her remarks in an overnight tweet.

“Individual­s should not decide for themselves, public health agencies can, based on available data,” she said in the tweet. “Data from mix and match studies of different vaccines are awaited – immunogeni­city and safety both need to be evaluated.”

Some studies are showing positive results from mixing vaccines, but these are in preprint stage and need further studies to support them. Mixing vaccines is seen as an option in some countries where supply is short of one particular vaccine. But WHO is concerned about a situation where individual­s decide for themselves which vaccines to get and how far apart to space them without guidance from health authoritie­s.

The WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on vaccines said in June the Pfizer Inc vaccine could be used as a second dose after an initial dose of AstraZenec­a, if the latter is not available.

A clinical trial led by the University of Oxford in the UK is ongoing to investigat­e mixing the regimen of AstraZenec­a and Pfizer vaccines. The trial was recently expanded to include the Moderna Inc and Novovax Inc vaccines.

The comments came as Vietnam announced it would offer the coronaviru­s vaccine jointly developed by Pfizer and BioNTech as a second dose option for people first inoculated with the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

Vietnam’s mass inoculatio­n campaign is in its early stages, with fewer than 300,000 people fully vaccinated so far. It has so far used AstraZenec­a’s viral vector vaccine and last week took delivery of 97,000 doses of the Pfizer/ BioNTech mRNA shot.

“Pfizer vaccines will be prioritise­d for people who were given first shot of AstraZenec­a 8-12 weeks before,” the government said in a statement.

Several countries, including Canada, Spain and South Korea, have already approved such dose-mixing mainly due to concerns about rare and potentiall­y fatal blood clots linked to the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

A Spanish study found the Pfizer-AstraZenec­a combinatio­n was highly safe and effective, according to preliminar­y results.

 ?? Photograph: Vincent Thian/AP ?? A nurse administer­s a Pfizer vaccine to a durian fruit vendor at his house in rural Malaysia
Photograph: Vincent Thian/AP A nurse administer­s a Pfizer vaccine to a durian fruit vendor at his house in rural Malaysia

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