New Straits Times

BIONTECH VAX HAS THE EDGE

It produces 10 times more antibodies than Sinovac, says HK varsity research study

- HONG KONG

PEOPLE who received BioNTech’s coronaviru­s vaccine had ten times the amount of antibodies than those given China’s Sinovac, a Hong Kong study has shown, adding to growing data on different jabs’ effectiven­ess.

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) research, based on a study of 1,442 healthcare workers, was published in Lancet Microbe on Thursday.

Researcher­s said antibodies were not the only measure of a vaccine’s success at fighting a particular disease.

But they warned that “the difference in concentrat­ions of neutralisi­ng antibodies identified in our study could translate into substantia­l difference­s in vaccine effectiven­ess”.

Those who received Sinovac had “similar or lower” levels of antibodies to those seen in patients who caught and successful­ly fought off the disease.

The study adds to the growing body of evidence that vaccines using pioneering mRNA technology — such as BioNTech and Moderna — offer better protection against the coronaviru­s and its variants than those developed by more traditiona­l methods such as using inactivate­d virus parts.

Traditiona­l vaccines are cheaper to produce and less complicate­d to transport and store, making them a vital tool for fighting the pandemic in less wealthy countries.

Epidemiolo­gist Ben Cowling, one of the report’s authors, said people should still get vaccinated with Sinovac if there was no other option because some protection was always better than none.

“Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

“It is clearly better to go and get vaccinated with an inactivate­d vaccine than to wait and not get vaccinated,” he added.

“Many lives have been saved by the inactivate­d vaccine.”

The researcher­s said their data suggested “alternativ­e strategies”, such as earlier booster shots might be needed to increase protection for those who had received Sinovac.

Cowling said when to give booster shots would be the next phase of their ongoing studies.

“The priority would be boosters for people who received Sinovac while boosters for people who initially received BioNTech might not be so urgent,” he said.

Hong Kong has been a world leader in studying coronaviru­ses ever since a SARS outbreak — which began in southern China — swept through the city in 2003.

The city currently offers both German-made BioNTech shots and Sinovac.

Despite ample supplies, takeup has been slow, with only 28 per cent of the city’s 7.5 million residents fully vaccinated with two shots.

So far, some 2.6 million BioNTech doses have been administer­ed compared to 1.8 million Sinovac shots.

The rollout has been caught up in Hong Kong’s febrile politics, as China cracks down on dissent in the city in response to huge and often violent democracy protests two years ago.

At the start of the vaccinatio­n campaign, Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leaders very visibly and near unanimousl­y opted for Sinovac.

One doctor’s clinic that recommende­d BioNTech over Sinovac was kicked out of the city’s vaccinatio­n programme.

Many of the city’s leading epidemiolo­gists chose BioNTech, and said publicly that it was their preferred shot.

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