Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tweaked vaccines aim to fend off variants

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD

Dozens of Americans are rolling up their sleeves for a third dose of COVID19 vaccine — this time, shots tweaked to guard against a worrisome mutated version of the virus.

Make no mistake: The vaccines currently being rolled out across the U.S. offer strong protection. But new studies of experiment­al updates to the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines mark a critical first step toward an alternativ­e if the virus eventually outsmarts today’s shots.

“We need to be ahead of the virus,” said Dr. Nadine Rouphael of Emory University, who is helping to lead a study of Moderna’s tweaked candidate. “We know what it’s like when we’re behind.”

It’s not clear if or when protection would wane enough to require an update but, “realistica­lly we want to turn COVID into a sniffle,” she added.

Viruses constantly evolve, and the world is in a race to vaccinate millions and tamp down the coronaviru­s before even more mutants emerge. More than 119 million Americans have had at least one vaccine dose, and 22% of the population is fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Much of the rest of the world is far behind that pace.

Already an easierto-spread version found in Britain just months ago has become the most common variant now circulatin­g in the United States, one that’s fortunatel­y vaccine-preventabl­e.

But globally, there’s concern that firstgener­ation vaccines may offer less protection against a different variant that first emerged in South Africa. All the major vaccine makers are tweaking their recipes in case an update against that so-called B.1.351 virus is needed. Now experiment­al doses from Moderna and Pfizer are being put to the test.

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