Medicine Hat News

How J&J and AstraZenec­a differ from Pfizer and Moderna

- MELISSA COUTO ZUBER

Johnson & Johnson’s singledose COVID-19 vaccine has hit a stumbling block in the United States as regulators begin investigat­ing reports of blood clots, weeks before the first shipment of the jabs are expected to arrive in Canada.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion said Tuesday they were investigat­ing clots in six women that occurred in the days after vaccinatio­n. The agencies are recommendi­ng pausing the use of the Johnson & Johnson jab in the country.

It’s the second COVID vaccine to be investigat­ed for a possible link to blood clotting after several European countries temporaril­y halted use of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine for the same reason last month.

Canada approved the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in early March, but manufactur­ing issues have delayed shipments.

Health Canada said Tuesday it is investigat­ing the latest reports, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau noted the country is still on track to receive its first shipment at the end of April.

Both Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a use the same vaccine technology, which differs from the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

Here’s how the four vaccines work:

VIRAL VECTORS

All of the approved COVID19 vaccines train the body to recognize the spike protein that coats the outer surface of the coronaviru­s.

Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a use a harmless version of a cold virus as a vector to give our cells the instructio­ns they need to make the coronaviru­s’s spike protein.

The immune system recognizes the protein and makes antibodies, which then allow us to fend off attack if exposed in the future.

Johnson & Johnson uses a human adenovirus, or a cold virus, to create its vaccine while AstraZenec­a uses a chimpanzee version.

Johnson & Johnson’s is the first single-dose vaccine approved in Canada. AstraZenec­a, like Pfizer and Moderna, requires two doses.

Experts say it takes a couple weeks for the body to build up some level of immunity with any of the vaccines.

MESSENGER RNA

VACCINES

Moderna and Pfizer use messenger RNA (mRNA), a novel technology that essentiall­y teaches our cells how to produce the coronaviru­s’s spike protein. That triggers an immune response if we become infected with the virus in the future.

All four of the vaccines basically work the same way, but there’s one less component involved with the mRNA versions. Whereas the viral vectors use another virus to give our cells the info they need to make the spike protein, mRNA dumps the genetic code in directly, without using another virus as a vessel.

Pfizer and Moderna use synthetica­lly-produced mRNA that’s packaged in a fat coating. The mRNA is dumped into the cell when the vaccine is injected into the arm muscle and it then translated into protein to make the antibody.

The vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna were the first inoculatio­ns approved for humans to use mRNA, but the technology was being worked on for decades before it was adapted to vaccine creation.

Previous research had been done on creating mRNA vaccines against Zika and other viruses, and there were earlier efforts focused on cancer treatments.

Early pitfalls against the mRNA technology was that it was too unstable and fragile, with the mRNA disintegra­ting upon entering the body. That problem was solved by packaging it in the fat coating, giving it something to help bind onto cells easier.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada