The Pak Banker

Pfizer vaccine found 94pc effective in real world

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The first big real-world study of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine to be independen­tly reviewed shows the shot is highly effective at preventing COVID-19, in a potentiall­y landmark moment for countries desperate to end lockdowns and reopen economies.

Up until now, most data on the efficacy of COVID19 vaccines has come under controlled conditions in clinical trials, leaving an element of uncertaint­y over how results would translate into the real world with its unpredicta­ble variables.

The research in Israel two months into one of the world's fastest rollouts, providing a rich source of data showed two doses of the Pfizer shot cut symptomati­c COVID-19 cases by 94% across all age groups, and severe illnesses by nearly as much.

The study of about 1.2 million people also showed a single shot was 57% effective in protecting against symptomati­c infections after two weeks, according to the data published and peerreview­ed in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday. The results of the study for the Clalit Research Institute were close to those in clinical trials last year which found two doses were found to be 95% effective.

"We were surprised because we expected that in the real-world setting, where cold chain is not maintained perfectly and the population is older and sicker, that you will not get as good results as you got in the controlled clinical trials," senior study author Ran Balicer told Reuters. "But we did and the vaccine worked as well in the real world."

"We have shown the vaccine to be as effective in very different sub-groups, in the young and in the old in those with no co-morbiditie­s and in those with few comorbidit­ies," he added.

The study also suggests the vaccine, developed by U.S drugmaker Pfizer and Germany's BioNTech, is effective against the coronaviru­s variant first identified in the UK. Researcher­s said they could not provide a specific level of efficacy, but the variant was the dominant version of the virus in Israel at the time of the study.

The research did not shed light on how the Pfizer shot will fare against another variant, now dominant in South Africa, that has been shown to reduce the efficacy of other vaccines. Of the nine million people in Israel, a nation with universal healthcare, nearly half have received a first dose, and a third have received both doses since the rollout began on Dec. 19.

This made the country a prime location for a realworld study into the vaccine's ability to stem the pandemic, along with its advanced data capabiliti­es. The study examined about 600,000 vaccinated people against the same sized control group of unvaccinat­ed people. Researcher­s at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital also collaborat­ed.

"This is more great news, confirming that the vaccine is around 90% effective at preventing documented infection of any degree of severity from 7 days after the second dose," said Peter English, a British government consultant in communicab­le disease control.

"Previous recently studied papers from Israel were observatio­nal studies. This one used an experiment­al design known as a case-control study ... giving greater confidence that difference­s between the groups are due to their vaccinatio­n status, and not to some other factor." The study published on Wednesday was the first analysis of a national COVID-19 vaccinatio­n strategy to be peer-reviewed. It also offered a more detailed look at how the vaccine was faring at weekly intervals, while matching people who received the shot to unvaccinat­ed individual­s with similar medical histories, sex, age and geographic­al characteri­stics.

Other research centres in Israel, including the Weizmann Institute of Science and the Israel Institute of Technology have shared several studies in recent weeks that show the vaccine to be effective.

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