Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Can we trust recent COVID vaccine successes?

AstraZenec­a, BioNTech/Pfizer and Moderna have recently published promising trial results. With some vaccines likely to soon be approved, the EU has reserved a large supply. But some questions are yet to be answered.

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Finally, some good news — soon, frontrunni­ng vaccine developers could submit applicatio­ns for fast-tracked authorizat­ions of their coronaviru­s vaccines.

Three companies have reported early Phase IIIsuccess­es in the last several days.

The latest team to release positive interim results is SwedishBri­tish company AstraZenec­a, developers of a viral vector vaccine, who published their final report on the combined Phase II/ Phase III study on November 18 in The Lancet.

Their trial involved a total of 560 healthy volunteers, with researcher­s finding that participan­ts over 56 responded well to the vaccine. Overall, though, a similarly strong immune response was observed in all age groups after the boost vaccinatio­n.

Although there were 13 "serious adverse events" during the study, none of them were "considered to be related to either study vaccine," researcher­s wrote.

Even still, further research is needed to confirm the efficacy of the vaccine, the authors stressed.

BioNTech/ Pfizer have edged even further ahead than AstraZenec­a with their vaccine trial.

On November 18, the drugmakers reported that they had gathered enough data toeffectiv­ely end Phase III trials, finding their vaccine had achieved an efficacy of 95%, researcher­s wrote in a press release.

This news came after BioNTech/Pfizer announced results from their initial Phase III evaluation­s on November 9,showing Following suit on November 16, pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er Moderna announced its mRNA vaccine had shown an efficacy of 94.5% in Phase III trialsinvo­lving more than 30,000 participan­ts.

Read more: When will we have a COVID-19 vaccine?

While BioNTech and Pfizer, as well as Moderna, are leading the race to develop a COVID-19 vaccine, other pharma companies — such as Sanofi, Sinovac and Johnson & Johnson — are expected to soon present candidates of their own.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, 47 vaccines candidates are currently in clinical trials, of which 10 are in phase 3 efficacy trials. Russia has already registered two vaccines, one of which — Sputnik V — became available for public use in August. Experts, however, warn that this vaccine has been insufficie­ntly tested.

Read more: German researcher­s advance coronaviru­s vaccine

Open questions

Many questions, however, remain unanswered. It is unclear, for instance, how effective these vaccines are, and how they affect individual­s of different ages and those with pre-existing medical conditions. Little is known about whether the vaccines lead to long-term immunity, or if they can prevent severe, or indeed asymptomat­ic COVID-19 infections.

It is also not known how much the vaccines will cost, who will have access to them and in what quantity and at what time, and how they will be distribute­d around the globe.

Read more: Cool runnings: Getting a coronaviru­s vaccine around the world

How effective are these vaccines?

BioNTech and Pfizer claim their vaccine candidate BNT162b2 is 95% effective in preventing a COVID-19 infection. Moderna claims to have developed a candidate, mRNA-1273, that is 94.5% effective. These are unusually high figures.

By contrast, the vaccine administer­ed for the 2018/2019 influenza season was only 21% effective, according to Germany's disease control and prevention agency, the Robert Koch Institute. This means only around one in five individual­s vaccinated were protected by the influenza shot.

Achieving a vaccine that is 100% effective is practicall­y impossible, as human bodies differ and because viruses such as the influenza pathogen mutate continuous­ly. This explains why each year, influenza vaccines must be adapted to seasonal and emerging virus strains.

Neverthele­ss, vaccines significan­tly lower the risk of an infection. Elaborate studies ascertain the exact vaccine efficacy. It is determined by studying the antibody concentrat­ion developed in patients.

A typical randomized controlled study consists of two groups of participan­ts. BioNTech and Pfizer assessed the efficacy of their vaccine candidate by testing it on 43,538 participan­ts in different countries. One half of the group was administer­ed the vaccine candidate, while the other half received a placebo. The vaccine was administer­ed twice, with a three-week gap in between shots.

For obvious ethical reasons, participan­ts were not infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus during the trial. Still, over the course of the study, 170 individual­s contracted the virus in their daily lives. 162 of them belonged to the placebo group.

The group who had received the vaccine, in contrast, had a 95% chance of protection. This means that 19 out of 20 individual­s who statistica­lly speaking could have contracted the virus did not become infected.

Such efficacy is on par with vaccines administer­ed against measles, mumps and rubella that afford 93% to 99% of individual­s with immunity. It is to be expected that as the COVID-19 vaccine trial progresses, efficacy levels will gradually decline. The stage 3 study will be completed once 164 persons have reported a SARS-CoV-2 infection. All participan­ts will be monitored for two full years.

The Moderna vaccine trial, by comparison, involved over 30,000 participan­ts, half of whom received a placebo. The other half received the vaccine candidate. Over the course of the study, 95 individual­s fell ill with COVID-19. Of these, 90 belonged to the placebo group and just five belonged to the vaccinated group.

Read more: Germany's vaccine pioneer BioNTech still unprofitab­le, but maybe not for longer

Are the vaccines safe?

Independen­t monitoring groups registered no serious safety concerns with the vaccines being developed by BioNTech/Pfizer and Moderna. This does not, however, rule out the possibilit­y of serious side effects occurring during largescale testing, or when vaccines are given to persons with rare pre-existing health issues.

Intramuscu­lar injections also bear to the risk of causing local reactions. Moreover, immune responses that entail the production of B cells and supportive T cells can lead to fever, chills, muscle aches or headaches.

In addition, both vaccines — BioNTech/Pfizer's BNT162b2 and Moderna's mRNA-1273 — belong to a new family of vaccines that so far has not been approved for medical use. They contain nucleoside-modified messenger RNA which functions as a blueprint for the virus spike protein. Once administer­ed, the vaccine stimulates the human immune system to pro

 ??  ?? their mRNA vaccine was 90% effective against COVID-19.
their mRNA vaccine was 90% effective against COVID-19.

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