Manila Bulletin

AstraZenec­a vaccine effective in over-80s, study shows

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PARIS (AFP) – The AstraZenec­a/ Oxford COVID-19 vaccine appears to be more than 80 percent effective at preventing severe illness among elderly, at-risk individual­s after a single dose, according to preliminar­y research published Wednesday.

The results, which have yet to be peer-reviewed, added to the growing body of evidence that the vaccine – which several countries have advised against giving to over-65s – is both safe and effective in older people.

Researcher­s at the University of Bristol analyzed patients aged over 80 admitted to hospital in Britain with respirator­y illness.

All the patients were tested for COVID-19, and the positive and negative cases were separated into two data groups.

The researcher­s then looked at how many people in each of the groups had received one dose of either the AstraZenec­a vaccine, or one developed by Pfizer.

They found that nine of the 36 (25 percent) COVID-19 positive patients had received the AstraZenec­a jab.

Among the COVID-19 negative patients, 53 out of 90 (58.9 percent) had received the jab.

The difference between the proportion of positive and negative cases who had received a single vaccine dose represente­d an 80.4-percent efficacy in reducing severe COVID19, the researcher­s said.

For the Pfizer vaccine, 18 out of 245 COVID-19 positive patients had received a single dose, compared to 90 of the 269 COVID-19 negative patients.

This correspond­ed to efficacy of 71.4 percent.

“A single dose of either (Pfizer) or (AstraZenec­a) vaccine resulted in substantia­l reductions in the risk of COVID-19-related hospitalis­ation in elderly, frail patients with extensive co-morbid disease,” the authors said.

Stephen Evans, professor of Pharmacoep­idemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the results “provide further evidence that the vaccines are effective both in an older age group less studied in the trials”.

Both vaccines were developed and clinically trialed to be administer­ed in the form of two separate doses a few weeks apart.

‘Both effective’ Although developers AstraZenec­a and the University of Oxford – as well as the World Health Organizati­on – have insisted since the results of Phase-III clinical trials that their vaccine is safe and effective among people aged over 65, several countries currently advise against administer­ing it to that age group.

The medicines agencies of both France and Germany limited the AstraZenec­a jab to people aged under 65.

Spain last month said it would not give the AstraZenec­a vaccine to people aged over 55.

A host of other nations have said they will not give the jab to older people, including the Netherland­s, Norway, Denmark and Greece.

French President Emmanuel Macron said in January that the AstraZenec­a jab was “quasi-ineffectiv­e” among over-65s.

Only around a quarter of the 1.7 million AstraZenec­a doses received by France had been administer­ed by the end of last month, according to health ministry figures.

By comparison, in Britain, the vaccine has been a key pillar of the immunisati­on drive, even among the elderly.

Paul Hunter, a professor in medicine at the University of East Anglia, said the study showed that “a single dose of either the Oxford AstraZenec­a or the Pfizer vaccine are both roughly equally effective at keeping elderly and frail people out of hospital and so reducing risk of death”.

Official data released Monday showed that both the AstraZenec­a/ Oxford and the Pfizer vaccine were “highly effective” in reducing infections and severe illness among elderly people.

France earlier this week advised that people aged between 65 and 75 receive the AstraZenec­a jab if they were at an elevated risk of severe COVID-19.

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