Albuquerque Journal

Mix-and-match approach for vaccines bolsters antibodies, study concludes

- BY ROBERT LANGRETH AND FIONA RUTHERFORD

Mixing COVID-19 vaccines produces as much or more antibodies as using the same shot as a booster, according to preliminar­y results of a widely awaited U.S. government-sponsored trial.

The trial is the first major U.S. study to compare the effects of using different vaccines as boosters from the initial shot or shots. The complicate­d, nine-arm trial involved over 450 people and measured the effects from giving a booster shot of the Moderna Inc., Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE or Johnson & Johnson vaccines to those who had originally gotten a different vaccine.

Overall, the results found that mixing-and-matching resulted in comparable or higher levels of neutralizi­ng antibodies compared to same-vaccine boosting, the researcher­s said in the preprint posted on medRxiv.org. Rates of adverse events were similar across all the different booster groups, the study found. “These data suggest that if a vaccine is approved or authorized as a booster, an immune response will be generated regardless of the primary COVID-19 vaccinatio­n regimen,” the researcher­s said in their conclusion.

The results from the ongoing trial have not yet been peer reviewed and published in a medical journal. More detail about the study is expected to be disclosed Friday afternoon at a meeting of FDA advisory panel, where researcher­s conducting the trial are scheduled to give a presentati­on on their early findings.

Mixing and matching boosters has become an increasing­ly important issue. Many countries outside the U.S. have used the method in an attempt to maximize vaccine effectiven­ess or avoid rare side effects that have been associated with some shots.

In the U.S., some people who received the Johnson & Johnson shot may be interested in getting a messenger RNA shot as a booster. Also, mixing-and-matching could make it easier for officials to roll out boosters more broadly, as people getting boosters could receive any COVID-19 vaccine on hand at their pharmacy and wouldn’t have to seek out the specific shot they had gotten previously.

Outside the U.S., concerns about rare blood clots associated with AstraZenec­a Plc’s vaccine led to many countries in Europe to pause use of the shot and instead administer a different second dose. In the U.K. health authoritie­s have rolled out a booster program for an extra dose of the Pfizer vaccine as the preferred option, and also offered a half dose of the Moderna shot as an alternativ­e.

 ?? PHIL LONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A health care worker administer­s the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to a Kent State Unversity student in April in Kent, Ohio. A study shows the J&J vaccine can be bolstered by other shots.
PHIL LONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS A health care worker administer­s the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to a Kent State Unversity student in April in Kent, Ohio. A study shows the J&J vaccine can be bolstered by other shots.

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