Global Times

Sinovac vaccine effective against variants

▶ Latest Brazil data show efficacy rises with injection interval of over 21 days

- By Hu Yuwei

China’s Sinovac COVID- 19 vaccine has 50.7 percent efficacy and has proved to be effective against the variants known as P1 and P2 that are prevalent in Brazil, latest data showed. Moreover, the Sinovac vaccine’s efficacy rate can climb to 62.3 percent with an interval of more than 21 days between doses rather than 14 days.

The findings appear in the latest report released on Sunday by Sao Paulo’s state- owned Butantan Institute, which tested and produced Sinovac’s COVID- 19 inactivate­d vaccine named CoronaVac.

The report released specific and comprehens­ive data on late- stage trials in Brazil. This is the most detailed statistica­l report on a Chinese COVID- 19 vaccine.

The primary efficacy against symptomati­c COVID- 19 is 50.7 percent. The vaccine is 83.7 percent effective in preventing cases requiring assistance, rising from 78 percent in data released in January. It is 100 percent effective against moderate and severe cases in the randomized, double- blind, placebo- controlled phase III clinical trial involving 12,396 participan­ts, the statistics revealed.

The efficacy rates revealed in this report are slightly higher than those reported in early January, due to tracking changes of clinical data and the different criteria used to define infection cases, spokespers­on Liu Peicheng of Sinovac told the Global Times on Monday.

The researcher­s found that longer intervals between two jabs can bring higher efficacy, in line with the observatio­ns of many Chinese medical researcher­s who recommend a longer interval to maximize the immune antibody level.

All six cases of severe COVID- 19 occurred in the placebo group. There were 67 serious adverse events reported by 64 participan­ts and all were determined to be unrelated to vaccinatio­n, including two fatal cases, it says.

The final results and relevant statistics are identical with results that got the Chinese drug regulator’s conditiona­l approval in February.

“This is the most detailed phase III study of a Chinesemad­e COVID- 19 vaccine to date. It overall demonstrat­es that CoronaVac has a good safety profile, and that it is efficaciou­s and protective against symptomati­c infections,” Zhuang Shilihe, a Guangzhoub­ased doctor who closely tracks COVID- 19 vaccines, told the Global Times on Monday, noting that its effectiven­ess can be optimized further by lengthenin­g the interval between doses.

But undeniably, compared with inactivate­d vaccines, the mRNA vaccines’ efficacy is higher, even much higher than some common vaccines in the market, which has driven up expectatio­ns, Zhuang suggested.

“But it does not mean that the inactivate­d vaccines are not qualified. Take flu vaccines, for instance – the actual effectiven­ess rates across many countries are between 40 and 50 percent, but this type of vaccine is still officially recognized and widely accepted to use,” Zhuang said.

Sinovac has also submitted the detailed data to the WHO and drug regulators in the countries or regions that are using CoronaVac, and the relevant authoritie­s will review these detailed figures before making approval decisions, the Global Times learned from Sinovac.

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