Gulf Today

Pfizer vaccine 85% effective after first shot: Israeli study

-

JERUSALEM: The first dose of Pfizer Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine is 85% effective, a study of healthcare workers at an Israeli hospital has found, potentiall­y fuelling a debate over the recommende­d two-dose schedule as government­s try to stretch out supplies.

The Sheba Medical Centre’s findings compare with overall efficacy of around 95% in a two dose regimen 21 days apart for the shot developed with Germany’s Biontech.

The Sheba study, to be published in The Lancet medical journal, comes a day ater Canadian researcher­s suggested that the second Pfizer dose be delayed given the high level of protection from the first shot in order to increase the number of people geting vaccinated.

Their research showed efficacy of 92.6% after the first dose, based on an analysis of the documents submited by the drugmaker from its late-stage human trials to the US Food and Drug Administra­tion in December.

The FDA said in December data from those trials showed that the vaccine began conferring some protection to recipients before they received the second shot, but more data would be needed to assess the potential of a single-dose shot.

Pfizer has said alternativ­e dosing regimens of the vaccine have not been evaluated yet and that the decision resided with the health authoritie­s.

Sheba said among 7,214 hospital staff who received their first dose in January, there was an 85% reduction in symptomati­c COVID-19 within 15 to 28 days. The overall reduction of infections, including asymptomat­ic cases detected by testing, was 75%.

Sheba epidemiolo­gist Gili Regev-yochay cautioned that the cohort studied at the hospital were “mostly young and healthy.”

Unlike with Pfizer’s clinical trial, “we don’t have many (staff) here aged over 65,” she told reporters. But she also noted that the Sheba study took place during a surge in COVID-19 infections in Israel, which flooded hospitals with new cases.

Pfizer declined to comment on the data, saying in a statement it was doing its own analysis of “the vaccine’s real-world effectiven­ess in several locations worldwide, including Israel.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain