Advertisement
Advertisement
Coronavirus pandemic
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A pharmacist prepares a dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine in Lawrence, Massachusetts, in December. Photo: AP

Pfizer begins testing Omicron-specific coronavirus shots

  • Vaccine makers have been updating their jabs to better match the highly infectious variant in case global health authorities decide the change is needed
  • The new US study will include up to 1,420 adult volunteers to help compare how the effective the updated shots are compared to the original
Pfizer is enrolling healthy adults to test a reformulated Covid-19 vaccine that matches the hugely contagious Omicron variant, to see how it compares with the original shots.

The company and its partner BioNTech announced the study on Tuesday.

Covid-19 vaccine makers have been updating their shots to better match Omicron in case global health authorities decide the change is needed.

Omicron is more likely than previous variants to cause infection even in people who have been vaccinated, but it is not yet clear that a change to the vaccine recipe will be ordered.

02:46

WHO says new vaccine to combat Omicron likely needed amid fears variant could infect half of Europe

WHO says new vaccine to combat Omicron likely needed amid fears variant could infect half of Europe

Among the issues regulators are weighing: some of the first places to face an Omicron surge already are seeing the mutant wane – and there is no way to know if the next variant that arises will resemble Omicron or be totally different.

The original vaccines still offer good protection against severe illness and death. Studies in the US and elsewhere have made clear that adding a booster dose strengthens that protection and improves the chances of avoiding even a milder infection.

“We recognise the need to be prepared in the event this protection wanes over time and to potentially help address Omicron and new variants in the future,” Kathrin Jansen, Pfizer’s vaccine research chief, said in a statement.

The new US study will include up to 1,420 volunteers ages 18 to 55 to test the updated Omicron-based shots for use as a booster or for primary vaccinations. Researchers will examine the tweaked vaccine’s safety and how it revs up the immune system in comparison to the original shots.

Full study results will take many months as volunteers receive multiple vaccine doses – and as researchers measure how long virus-fighting antibodies remain at high levels after an Omicron-adapted dose versus the regular booster.

Pfizer’s CEO told CNBC earlier this month that the company could have some Omicron-matched doses ready as early as March.

But doing what the company calls “at-risk” manufacturing does not mean those doses will be rolled out to the public.

Pfizer and other vaccine makers also have brewed and tested experimental doses to match previous variants, changes that ultimately were not needed but offered valuable practice at tweaking the recipe.

For the new study, one group of about 600 volunteers who received two doses of the current Pfizer vaccine three to six months ago will receive either one or two Omicron-based shots as boosters.

Another 600 who have already received three regular doses of the Pfizer vaccine will be given a fourth dose of either the regular vaccine or the Omicron-matched version.

The study also will enrol some unvaccinated volunteers who will receive three doses of the Omicron-based vaccine.

Pfizer plans to produce 4 billion vaccine doses in 2022, and said on Tuesday the amount is not expected to change if an Omicron-adapted version is needed.

21