Los Angeles Times

Scientists explore combining COVID vaccines

Mixing doses from various manufactur­ers seems inevitable and could be beneficial. A study aims to find out.

- BY MELISSA HEALY

Many of us have engaged in bold mixing and matching during the pandemic — office attire on top, pajama pants on bottom, for example — and been none the worse for it.

Imagine doing the same with COVID-19 vaccines, perhaps pairing a first dose of the AstraZenec­a product with a second dose supplied by Novavax. Will the consequenc­es be graver?

It’s hardly an idle question: By accident or by design, some mismatched dosing is inevitable, experts say.

Two vaccines are being rolled out across the United States, with a third expected to join them this week and two more likely over the next several months. All but one were designed to be delivered as two-dose regimens.

An additional 69 vaccines are in clinical developmen­t around the globe, and nearly two-thirds of those were designed to generate immunity with two or more doses.

But making sure people get the right vaccine at the right time has turned out to be a greater logistical challenge than initially expected. Meanwhile, the unexpected­ly swift emergence of menacing coronaviru­s variants has made it imperative to get shots into arms as quickly as possible.

Health officials in Britain proposed a radical solution to both problems: Delay second doses for up to 12 weeks so that more people could get at least some protection. Later, the government acknowledg­ed that in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, mismatched doses may be given to people who arrive for their second dose and discover that the vaccine they originally had is not available.

It seemed prepostero­us, especially considerin­g that these protocols were not evaluated in clinical trials. If they don’t work, the precious vaccine will have been wasted, at a time when there’s none to spare.

“I wouldn’t make any changes unless you’ve got good data,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “I don’t think you mix and match without results showing it’s very effective and safe.”

Now British researcher­s are trying to do just that.

Last month, a team of vaccinolog­ists from Oxford University began recruiting 800 or so people ages 50 or older for a complex study to see whether vaccine switching could work.

Using an eight-armed clinical trial, they’ll test regimens using various combinatio­ns and intervals of the two vaccines currently being dispensed in Britain: one made by Pfizer and BioNTech and another developed by Oxford and AstraZenec­a.

In announcing the mixand-match vaccine trial, Dr. Matthew Snape cited experiment­s in mice in which combinatio­ns of the Pfizer and AstraZenec­a vaccines boosted immunity better than two doses of either one alone. Perhaps it would work in humans as well.

Both vaccines prime the immune system to target the spike protein on the surface of the coronaviru­s, which plays an instrument­al role in the infection process. But the vaccines home in on different parts of the spike, and they deliver their payloads by very different means.

The AstraZenec­a vaccine uses a modified cold virus to present the spike protein to the immune system, while the Pfizer one hands over genetic instructio­ns for making the spike protein and relies on human cells to produce it.

Additional COVID-19 vaccines made by Novavax and Johnson & Johnson also focus on the spike proteins, and researcher­s expect to add them to the trial as it proceeds. (Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine candidate is designed to be administer­ed as a single dose, but the company is testing whether a second dose, delivered 57 days after the first, would provide a higher level of immunity.)

The British trial is expected to release its findings in June.

The mouse study cited by Snape has encouraged scientists’ belief that combining vaccines will kick the body’s immune system into a higher gear. By nudging it through various means and training it to recognize new and different pieces of the coronaviru­s, these mismatched regimens could not only generate neutralizi­ng antibodies but also boost production of a specialize­d class of immune cells called CD8+ T-cells.

The neutralizi­ng antibodies that are produced in response to most vaccines specialize in hunting down and killing free-floating viral particles as they circulate in the bloodstrea­m. Fielding an army of CD8+ T-cells as well would empower the immune system to find and kill cells that have already been infected and turned into virus-copying factories. That would end an infection faster and more completely.

These T-cells have long and specific memories of what the SARS-CoV-2 virus looks like. That means immunity might last longer when this army of immune cells is recruited.

Though mixing vaccines awakened these T-cells in mice, the same response has not been demonstrat­ed conclusive­ly in humans. Nor have studies borne out scientists’ hope that mismatched vaccines can be safely administer­ed to millions of healthy people.

One potential benefit of mismatched vaccines is that if the two shots target different sets of proteins on the virus’ surface, the immune system would be prepared to face a wider array of threats. That might preserve or improve vaccine-induced immunity as new variants of the virus arise.

The emergence of a new strain in South Africa has underscore­d the importance of having such a backup.

After evidence surfaced that the variant was less susceptibl­e to Astra-Zeneca’s vaccine, Moderna began work on a modified shot tailored specifical­ly to protect against the strain. Doses of the booster vaccine were sent last week to the National Institutes of Health for testing, and a new clinical trial will explore whether it expands the immunity of people who have already been vaccinated against COVID-19.

But there is recent precedent for combining vaccines that use different vehicles to deliver their immunologi­cal payloads.

The two doses of Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine use two kinds of viruses to transport the genetic instructio­ns that tell the immune system which coronaviru­s surface proteins to look for. The first is a harmless cold virus. For the second shot that comes 21 days later, scientists engineered another innocuous cold virus to carry the cargo. This way, there’s no chance the immune system will inadverten­tly attack the harmless cold virus when it’s time for the second dose. With a new ride, the vaccine’s genetic payload can slip by unchalleng­ed.

Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute, which designed Sputnik V, took a similar approach to formulatin­g the first and second doses of its Ebola vaccine. Several experiment­al HIV vaccines are also testing this approach.

The COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna use the same mRNA “platform” that prompts cells to construct harmless spike proteins that the immune system will learn to recognize.

However, they encapsulat­e their instructio­ns in different packages. (This may explain why the risk of the severe allergic reaction called anaphylaxi­s is more than four times higher with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine than with the Moderna one, though it’s extremely low for both.)

In late January, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told medical profession­als they could offer a mismatched second dose of mRNA vaccine “in exceptiona­l situations in which the first-dose vaccine product cannot be determined or is no longer available.”

But there’s a reason every multi-dose vaccine on the U.S. market — from the hepatitis B shots that start just after birth to the shingles vaccine series for adults in their 50s — comes with a recommenda­tion to get all doses from the same manufactur­er: Their safety and efficacy have been tested as an establishe­d pairing. Mix-and-match combos have not.

The problem with testing the safety and efficacy of combinatio­ns is compounded by the complexity of the immune system.

“What we know to measure is only half the story,” said Dr. Gregory Poland, a vaccine researcher at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

The British mix-andmatch trial will measure the amount of antibodies in the bloodstrea­m, but immunity is more complicate­d than that. Immunity brought about by neutralizi­ng antibodies and immunity brought about by, say, CD8+ cells complement each other in mysterious ways.

“If you alter one component of that, you no longer know if you have the same efficacy and safety,” Poland said.

But this level of caution may be a luxury we can’t afford in a public health emergency.

In the midst of a pandemic, a natural experiment in mixing and matching may be unavoidabl­e. Snarls in vaccine production and distributi­on are bound to happen, imperiling guaranteed on-time access to a second dose that matches the first.

People in search of their second shot may not even remember what they got the first time around. And many may be willing to take whatever they can get.

“There’s the ideal, and there’s the necessary borne of the practical,” Poland said. “Absent clinical trials, you do studies on the f ly. But you’d like to have studies.”

 ?? John Cairns Associated Press ?? A RESEARCHER at Oxford University, which is launching a clinical trial of various combinatio­ns and intervals of COVID-19 vaccines.
John Cairns Associated Press A RESEARCHER at Oxford University, which is launching a clinical trial of various combinatio­ns and intervals of COVID-19 vaccines.

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