Philippine Daily Inquirer

UK TRIAL: WILL 2 DIFFERENT JABS GIVE SAME RESPONSE?

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LONDON—A UK study into using different COVID-19 vaccines in two-dose inoculatio­ns is being expanded to include shots made by Moderna and Novavax, researcher­s said on Wednesday.

The trial, known as the Com-Cov study, was first launched in February to look at whether giving a first dose of one type of COVID-19 shot, and a second dose of another, elicits an immune response that is as good as using two doses of the same vaccine.

The idea, said Matthew Snape, the Oxford University professor leading the trial, “is to explore whether the multiple COVID-19 vaccines that are available can be used more flexibly.”

Britain and many other countries in Europe are currently using AstraZenec­a’s and Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccines in nationwide immunizati­on campaigns against the coronaviru­s pandemic.

‘Second dose, new brand’

But reports of very rare blood clots have prompted some government­s—including France and Germany— to say the AstraZenec­a shot should only be given to certain age groups, or that people who have had a first dose of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine should switch to a different one for their second dose.

In a briefing about the expansion of the study to include Moderna’s and Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccines, Snape, an associate professor in paediatric­s and vaccinolog­y at Oxford, said it will seek to recruit adults aged over 50 who have received their first, or “prime” vaccinatio­n in the past 8-12 weeks.

These volunteers, who will have received either the AstraZenec­a or Pfizer vaccine, will be randomly allocated to get either the same vaccine, or the Moderna or Novavax vaccine, for a second dose.

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