The Jerusalem Post

Indian study finds big antibodies drop within four months of vaccinatio­n

- • By JATINDRA DASH and KRISHNA N. DAS

BHUBANESWA­R, India (Reuters) – A study of 614 fully vaccinated health workers in India found a “significan­t” drop in their COVID-fighting antibodies within four months of the first shot.

The findings could help the Indian government decide whether to provide booster doses as some Western countries have done.

Waning antibodies do not necessaril­y mean that immunized people lose their ability to counter the disease, as the body’s memory cells may still kick in to offer substantia­l protection, said the director of a state-run institute that did the study.

“After six months, we should be able to tell you more clearly whether and when a booster would be needed,” Sanghamitr­a Pati of the Regional Medical Research Centre, based in the eastern city of Bhubaneswa­r, told Reuters on Tuesday.

“And we would urge similar studies in different areas for pan-India data.”

British researcher­s said last month that protection offered by two doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech and the AstraZenec­a vaccines begins to fade within six months

The Indian study, published in the Research Square pre-print platform but yet to be peer reviewed, is one of the first such done in the country involving its main two vaccines – Covishield, a licensed version of the AstraZenec­a shot, and domestical­ly developed Covaxin.

Health officials say though they are studying the evolving science on booster doses, the priority is to fully immunize India’s 944 million adults. More than 60% of them have received at least one dose and 19% the required two doses.

COVID cases and deaths in India have come down sharply since a peak of more than 400,000 infections in early May. India has reported 33.29 million cases in total and 443,213 deaths.

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