The Citizen (KZN)

Booster dose breakthrou­gh

PRELIMINAR­Y RESULTS SHOW PEOPLE MAY BENEFIT

- Washington

‘It’s important not to get too carried away with findings.’

People who received Johnson & Johnson’s Covid vaccine may benefit from a booster dose of Pfizer or Moderna, preliminar­y results of a United States study showed.

The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was eagerly awaited in the US because it looked at the possibilit­y of “mixing” vaccines – using a different vaccine than the initial doses for the booster shot – which is not currently allowed in the country.

The study was conducted on 458 adults who had been vaccinated with one of three US-approved brands (Pfizer, Moderna or J&J) for at least 12 weeks.

These three groups were each divided into three new groups to receive one of the available vaccines as a booster.

The nine groups consisted of about 50 people each.

Researcher­s then analysed antibody levels 15 days after the booster shot.

For people originally inoculated with roadmap, antibody levels were four times higher after a J&J booster, 35 times higher after a Pfizer booster and 76 times higher after a Moderna booster.

And antibody levels for those who had originally received Moderna shots were higher “irrespecti­ve of the booster vaccine administer­ed”, when compared with those who had initially received Pfizer or J&J, the study said.

Additional­ly, “no safety concerns were identified” after booster doses were administer­ed, it found.

The study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, has several limitation­s, however.

The number of participan­ts was small and the immune response could evolve over time.

“It’s important not to get too carried away with the findings,” tweeted Peter Hotez, a professor at Baylor College of Medicine.

Results from trials on a second J&J booster shot conducted by the company itself were “impressive”, he said.

The NIH study should fuel discussion­s by a US Food and Drug Administra­tion expert committee, which is scheduled to consider applicatio­ns for a booster dose from Moderna and J&J.

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