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AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine shows 74% efficacy in large U.S. trial

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CHICAGO, (Reuters) - AstraZenec­a Plc’s COVID-19 vaccine demonstrat­ed 74% efficacy at preventing symptomati­c disease, a figure that increased to 83.5% in people aged 65 and older, according to long-awaited results of the company’s U.S. clinical trial published yesterday.

Overall efficacy of 74% was lower than the interim 79% figure reported by the British drugmaker in March, a result AstraZenec­a revised days later to 76% after a rare public rebuke from health officials that the figure was based on “outdated informatio­n.”

The data looked at more than 26,000 volunteers in the United States, Chile and Peru, who received two doses of the vaccine spaced about a month apart. The results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

There were no cases of severe or critical symptomati­c COVID-19 among the more than 17,600 participan­ts who got the vaccine, compared with 8 such cases among the 8,500 volunteers who got the placebo. There were also two deaths in the placebo group but none among those who received the vaccine.

“I was pleasantly surprised,” Dr. Anna Durbin, a vaccine researcher at Johns Hopkins University and one of the study’s investigat­ors, said of the overall result. “It was also highly protective against severe disease and hospitaliz­ation,” she said.

There were no cases of a rare but serious blood clotting side effect called thrombosis with thrombocyt­openia that has been linked to the AstraZenec­a vaccine developed with Oxford University researcher­s.

AstraZenec­a said in late July it planned to file for full approval with the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, rather than seek emergency use authorizat­ion. Chief Executive Pascal Soriot told a media briefing at the time he hoped the vaccine could still play a role in the United States, even though the process was taking longer than expected.

The company is exploring booster doses for people who have already been vaccinated with two doses of either its own shot or mRNA-based vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna.

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