Albuquerque Journal

J&J asks US regulators to OK its one-shot COVID-19 vaccine

Results showed 66% efficacy overall in trials

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD

Johnson & Johnson asked U.S. regulators Thursday to clear the world’s first single-dose COVID-19 vaccine, an easier-touse option that could boost scarce supplies.

J&J’s vaccine was safe and offered strong protection against moderate to severe COVID-19, according to preliminar­y results from a massive internatio­nal study.

It didn’t appear quite as strong as twodose competitor­s made by Pfizer and Moderna -- a finding that may be more perception than reality, given difference­s in how each was tested.

But the Food and Drug Administra­tion is asking its independen­t advisers to publicly debate all the data behind the single-dose shot -- just like its competitor­s were put under the microscope -- before it decides whether to green light a third vaccine option in the U.S. The panel will meet Feb. 26.

Dr. Peter Marks, FDA’s vaccine chief, has cautioned against making comparison­s before the evidence is all in.

“With so much need to get this pandemic under control, I think we can’t ignore any tool in the tool chest,” he told the American Medical Associatio­n last week. “We will have to do our best to try to make sure that we find the population­s that benefit the most from each of these vaccines and deploy them in a very thoughtful manner.”

WHAT THE NUMBERS SHOW: Overall, the single-dose vaccine was 66% effective at preventing moderate to severe COVID-19, according to early findings from a study of 44,000 people in the U.S., Latin America and South Africa.

But it was 85% protective against the most serious symptoms — and starting 28 days after their shot, researcher­s found no one who got the vaccine needed hospitaliz­ation or died.

WEAKER BUT STILL FIGHTS MUTATING VIRUS: The one-dose option worked better in the U.S. — 72% effective against moderate to severe COVID-19 — compared with 66% in Latin America and 57% in South Africa, where a more contagious mutant virus is spreading.

Scientists have been looking for realworld evidence about how vaccines work as the world races to stay ahead of the rapidly mutating virus, and welcomed the news that the J&J option — while weaker — did still offer protection.

OTHER OPTIONS: In large U.S. studies, two doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines proved 95% protective against any symptomati­c COVID-19.

But those studies were finished before the record virus surges of recent months and the appearance of the worrisome mutants, meaning such testing might not turn out the same if repeated today.

J&J also is studying a two-dose version of its vaccine, but results won’t be available for several more months.

THE SUPPLY: J&J said it would have some vaccine ready to ship if the FDA allows emergency use of the shot, but it didn’t reveal how much. The pharmaceut­ical giant said it expects to supply 100 million doses to the U.S. by the end of June.

It expects to file a similar applicatio­n with European regulators soon.

 ?? JOHNSON & JOHNSON ?? Johnson & Johnson has asked U.S. regulators to clear the world’s first singledose COVID-19 vaccine, an easier-to-use option that could boost scarce supplies.
JOHNSON & JOHNSON Johnson & Johnson has asked U.S. regulators to clear the world’s first singledose COVID-19 vaccine, an easier-to-use option that could boost scarce supplies.

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