National Post (National Edition)

J&J denies design to blame for clots

- JULIE STEENHUYSE­N

• Scientists at Johnson & Johnson on Friday refuted an assertion in a major medical journal that the design of their COVID-19 vaccine, which is similar AstraZenec­a's, may explain why both have been linked to rare brain blood clots in some vaccine recipients.

The United States earlier this week paused distributi­on of the J&J vaccine to investigat­e six cases of a rare brain blood clot known as cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), accompanie­d by a low blood platelet count, in U.S. women under age 50, out of about seven million people who got the shot.

The blood clots in patients who received the J&J vaccine bear close resemblanc­e to 169 cases in Europe reported with the AstraZenec­a vaccine, out of 34 million doses administer­ed there.

Both vaccines are based on a new technology that uses a modified version of adenovirus­es, which cause the common cold, as vectors to ferry instructio­ns to human cells. Several scientists have suggested the issue may be a “class effect” linked to this type of vaccine.

In a letter on Friday in the New England Journal of Medicine, J&J scientists refuted a case report published earlier this week by Kate Lynn-Muir and colleagues at the University of Nebraska, who asserted that the rare blood clots “could be related to adenoviral vector vaccines.”

In an interview with Reuters on Thursday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert and an adviser to the White House, said the fact that they are both adenovirus vector vaccines is a “pretty obvious clue” that the cases could be linked to the vector.

“Whether that is the reason, I can't say for sure, but it certainly is something that raises suspicion,” Fauci said.

In the correspond­ence on Friday, Macaya Douoguih, a scientist with J&J's Janssen vaccines division, and colleagues pointed out that the vectors used in its vaccine and the AstraZenec­a shot are “substantia­lly different” and that those difference­s could lead to “quite different biological effects.”

Specifical­ly, they noted that the J&J vaccine uses a human adenovirus while the AstraZenec­a vaccine uses a chimpanzee adenovirus. The vectors are also from different virologica­l families or species, and use different cell receptors to enter cells.

The J&J shot also includes mutations to stabilize the socalled spike protein portion of the coronaviru­s that the vaccine uses to produce an immune response, while the AstraZenec­a vaccine does not.

The J&J scientists said in the letter there was not enough evidence to say their vaccine caused the blood clots and they continue to work with health authoritie­s to assess the data.

A panel of advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are expected to meet on April 23 to determine whether the pause on use of the J&J vaccine can be lifted.

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