Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

VACCINE GAP...

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“The 8 weeks gap is being considered in the technical groups. Once they come to a view, the matter will come to NEGVAC (the national expert group on vaccine administra­tion for Covid-19) ,” said a top Indian government official familiar with the developmen­t, who asked not to be named.

In a study of 14,019 symptomati­c Delta variant infections, including 166 who were hospitalis­ed, Public Health England reported vaccine efficacy against symptomati­c disease fell to 30% if only one dose of Oxford-astrazenec­a vaccine was given, compared to 67% when both shots were administer­ed.

In the case of the Pfizer-biontech vaccine, the comparable numbers were 36% and 88%. These numbers are similar to findings last month, and have been the basis for the Boris Johnson government reducing the gap between the doses and delaying a planned lifting of remaining Covid-19 curbs (the current extension is till July 19)

In India, experts said they were looking at such findings and more. “While we are open to reviewing the gap, it’s a misconcept­ion that we blindly follow the West. The truth is we are more focused on looking at the data being generated within the country to make important vaccine-related decisions. We followed the four-week interval in India when UK was following the 12-week gap, so we may be looking at the evidence coming from the West, but our decisions pivot around the data that will tell us what’s best for our people. India data is crucial for us and we are closely watching it,” said Dr NK Arora, chairman, Covid working group on vaccines.

He added: “We already have results of two studies before us from north and south India— one from PGI Chandigarh and another from CMC Vellore— that clearly tells us that irrespecti­ve of the Covishield vaccine dose interval, people getting a single dose or both the doses are having similar protection against the Delta variant (B.1.617.2) and Alpha variant (B.1.1.7).”

News agency Reuters quoted three experts who were part of the technical group known as National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisati­on (NTAGI) as saying that they recommenda­tion was to extend the gap between Covishield doses to 8-12 weeks. ”Eight to 12 weeks is something we all accepted, 12 to 16 weeks is something the government has come out with,” the Reuters report quoted MG Gupte, a former director of the state-run National Institute of Epidemiolo­gy, as saying.

This was echoed by his NTAGI colleague Mathew Varghese, who said the group’s recommenda­tion was only for 8-12 weeks, the report added. A third member, JP Muliyil, said there had been discussion­s within the NTAGI on increasing the vaccine dosage interval but that the body had not recommende­d 12-16 weeks. “That specific number was not quoted,” Reuters quoted him as saying.

In a statement later on Tuesday, Arora said there was no dissent within the NTAGI.

Arora also said results of at least three to four more studies are expected, and the expert panel will review these in detail before taking a decision. “Interval debate has to be seen in a contextual manner based on responses we are seeing in our country as adeno-vectored vaccines behave differentl­y in different settings and we have to make decisions based on how they behave in our population,” he added. But other experts said the data from UK should be taken into account in India.

“These data are what need to be considered for decision-making for India,” said Dr Gagandeep Kang, physician-scientist, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, in a tweet linking to the PHE report.

Another top government expert confirmed the variant prevalent now is more dangerous, and said further mutations are being studied. “The virus in circulatio­n is far cleverer than what we saw in 2020; therefore we need to be more alert while dealing with it as RNA viruses are particular­ly predispose­d to errors in their replicatio­n that leads to the virus acquiring a new character to an extent.

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