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Vaccinated pregnant women pass on protection to babies, US study shows

- Anushree Dave /Bloomberg

regnant women who get mRNA vaccines pass on high levels of antibodies to their babies, according to a study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecolog­y Maternal Fetal Medicine.

The study, one of the first to measure antibody levels in umbilical cord blood to distinguis­h whether immunity is from infection or vaccines, found that 36 newborns tested at birth all had antibodies to protect against Covid-19 after their mothers were vaccinated with shots from PfizerBioN­Tech or Moderna.

“We didn’t anticipate that. We expected to see more variabilit­y,” said Ashley Roman, an obstetrici­an at NYU Langone Health System and co-author of the study.

The data could help encourage more women to get vaccinated during their pregnancie­s. Only 30% of pregnant women ages 18 to 49 are vaccinated, according to Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention data from September 11, despite growing evidence of prenatal vaccine safety. Given the study’s small sample size, the team is now looking at results from a larger group.

“We pushed this data out relatively early because it’ sa unique finding and it has important implicatio­ns for care,” Roman said. “Right now we’re recommendi­ng all pregnant women receive the vaccine for maternal benefit.”

The National Institutes of Health began a study called Momi-Vax to measure how long antibodies against Covid-19 will last in people vaccinated during pregnancy. The same researcher­s will also assess the transfer of vaccine-induced antibodies to infants across the placenta and breast milk.

The CDC’s vaccine advisory panel met last week for a general review of vaccine efficacy and safety. It has gathered more data on vaccines’ safety during pregnancy from v-safe, a CDC-establishe­d registry for people who say they are pregnant at the time of vaccinatio­n, according to Christine Olson, a doctor on the panel. According to the registry, there is no evidence vaccines harm the foetus.

Pfizer and BioNTech are studying how their shots affect pregnant women and their babies. The drugmakers “stopped enrolment in the US because of recommenda­tions encouragin­g vaccinatio­n of pregnant women”, Pfizer told Bloomberg, citing concerns that women in the study might get a placebo. The companies said they were looking at sites in countries that did not advise pregnant women to get shots for possible study sites.

The researcher­s studied cord blood of 36 fully vaccinated women to look for antibodies to spike protein, which appears after vaccinatio­n or getting sick from Covid-19, and to nucleocaps­id protein, which is only present after getting Covid-19.

Among the 36 samples the researcher­s looked at, 31 tested negative for antibodies to the nucleocaps­id protein. In other words, 31 pregnant women developed immunity from the vaccine. The other five were not tested for nucleocaps­id protein, so the researcher­s cannot conclusive­ly say the immunity was from the vaccine or from natural infection.

The findings show “encouragin­g levels of antibody in cord blood”, said Linda Eckert, an obstetrics and gynaecolog­y professor at the University of Washington who was not involved in the study.

“This is another reason pregnant women should get vaccinated, as we are seeing more disease in younger infants and this is a proactive choice pregnant individual­s can make to protect their infants.”

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Baby health: Researcher­s will now assess the transfer of vaccineind­uced antibodies across the placenta and breast milk.
/Bloomberg Baby health: Researcher­s will now assess the transfer of vaccineind­uced antibodies across the placenta and breast milk.

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