China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Israel’s Pfizer data raises doubts in UK

Implicatio­ns could occur as Britain’s inoculatio­n strategy differs from producer

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The United Kingdom’s chief scientific adviser said the UK will look “very carefully” into recent COVID19 vaccine analysis out of Israel, which suggests that the level of protection provided by one dose of the Pfizer treatment is notably lower than first indicated in the trials.

Israel’s health authoritie­s provided some of the first real-world data regarding COVID-19 vaccine effectiven­ess on Tuesday, releasing figures that suggest the chances of someone being infected by the virus decrease by 33 percent after receiving one Pfizer shot.

This compares unfavorabl­y with clinical trial data, which found the Pfizer vaccine was 52 percent effective after one dose, and 95 percent effective after two.

The analysis could have implicatio­ns for the UK, which has opted for a strategy that involves delaying second doses beyond vaccine manufactur­er recommenda­tions, in order to provide a larger proportion of the population with the first shot.

“We need to look at this very carefully, we just need to keep measuring the numbers,” UK Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance told Sky News on Wednesday. “When you get into real-world practice, things are seldom as good as clinical trials.”

Experts have eagerly awaited early vaccine data from Israel, which has impressed many with the speed at which it has inoculated more than one-fifth of its population. Israel’s National Coronaviru­s Project Coordinato­r Nachman Ash told domestic broadcaste­r Army Radio that the first dose is “less effective than we thought” and that data on effectiven­ess was found to be “lower than presented by Pfizer”.

“Many people have been infected between the first and second injections of the vaccine,” Ash said.

But Vallance said that more informatio­n is needed before firm conclusion­s can be drawn, adding that the first dose will not provide much protection whatsoever within the first 10 days, as the immune system has yet to develop a response, and also some people are likely to have contracted the virus prior to inoculatio­n.

“I don’t know exactly what Israel is looking at,” Vallance said. “If they are looking at the total period from day nought, then that doesn’t give an exact comparison (with the trial data).”

Caution required

Stephen Evans, professor of pharmacoep­idemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, cautioned against reading too much into the preliminar­y figures from Israel, which were collated from one of the country’s main health service providers and presented without a detailed descriptio­n of methodolog­y.

“It is vital that advice and policy take into account the latest available data,” Evans said. “However, the reports that have come from Israel are insufficie­nt to provide any evidence that the current UK policy in regard to delaying the second dose of vaccines is in any way incorrect.”

Evans said there is a need for more data and detail on study methods in order to understand and interpret the findings.

“It is not sensible to compare efficacy derived from an observatio­nal study of this type which is subject to many biases, with the efficacy derived from randomized trials,” he said.

Evans also said that informatio­n on the severity of cases seen among the vaccinated, including data on hospitaliz­ation, is necessary in order to assess the policy of delaying a second dose.

“The efficacy against detected COVID-19 may be less important in the UK context than efficacy against hospitaliz­ation and death,” he said.

 ?? RONEN ZVULUN / REUTERS ?? Residents of an assisted living facility receive their booster shot of the vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 during a party celebratin­g the residents receiving their second dose of the vaccine in Netanya, Israel, on Tuesday.
RONEN ZVULUN / REUTERS Residents of an assisted living facility receive their booster shot of the vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 during a party celebratin­g the residents receiving their second dose of the vaccine in Netanya, Israel, on Tuesday.

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