Iran Daily

Russia says COVID-19 vaccine showing to be 91% to 95% effective

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Aweek after extremely promising news about two US vaccines, developers of Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine said it has shown an efficacy rate better than 91%. Moscow’s Gamaleya Center and the Russian Direct Investment Fund, which is developing the vaccine, said interim clinical data show it is about 91% efficient after 28 days and 95% after 42 days, UPI reported.

Researcher­s have studied the vaccine in close to 19,000 volunteers, who received both doses of the Sputnik V vaccine or a placebo. The informatio­n released was the second set of interim third-stage data for the Sputnik V vaccine. The first set showed efficacy between 91% and 92%.

“The data demonstrat­ing high efficacy of the Sputnik V vaccine give us hope that we will soon obtain the most important tool in the fight against the pandemic,” Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said in a statement.

The second analysis was conducted a week after volunteers received a second dose. Developers said they expect the efficacy rate will ultimately rise, based on the data.

“We plan to conduct the third interim data analysis after 78 confirmed coronaviru­s cases among volunteers and we have every reason to believe that the results will exceed our initial expectatio­ns,” said Gamaleya Center Director Alexander Gintsburg.

Russian Direct Investment Fund CEO Kirill Dmitriev said results of the clinical trial will be published in a leading peer-reviewed medical journal.

Moscow announced the vaccine in August and it was met

with an initial wave of skepticism in the scientific community, as it still had yet to go through late-stage testing.

Last week, Pfizer and Biontech said final clinical data showed their vaccine is 95% effective. Days later, Moderna reported similar efficacy for its vaccine.

The Russian Direct Investment Fund said the Sputnik V vaccine, at less than $10 per dose, will be less expensive than the US vaccines.

Developers previously said they plan to produce 500 million doses of the vaccine per year, beginning next year.

 ?? RDIF/EPA-EFE ?? Vials of the Sputnik V vaccine are seen at Nikolai Gamaleya National Center of Epidemiolo­gy and Microbiolo­gy in Moscow, Russia.
RDIF/EPA-EFE Vials of the Sputnik V vaccine are seen at Nikolai Gamaleya National Center of Epidemiolo­gy and Microbiolo­gy in Moscow, Russia.

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