Bahrain Telegraph - Moderna announces positive results for Omicron vaccine

NYSE - LSE
RIO 0.22% 75.99 $
CMSC 0.17% 23.34 $
SCS 0.12% 16.14 $
NGG -0.34% 75.77 $
BTI -0.79% 57.29 $
CMSD 0.06% 23.38 $
RBGPF 0.5% 82.01 $
BCE -1.2% 23.33 $
RYCEF -2.12% 14.64 $
GSK -0.94% 48.78 $
BCC 0.67% 75.84 $
BP -4.41% 33.76 $
JRI -0.37% 13.51 $
AZN -0.23% 91.35 $
RELX -0.64% 40.82 $
VOD 0% 12.7 $
Moderna announces positive results for Omicron vaccine
Moderna announces positive results for Omicron vaccine / Photo: © AFP

Moderna announces positive results for Omicron vaccine

US biotech company Moderna on Wednesday announced positive results for a new vaccine that targets both the original Covid strain and Omicron.

Text size:

This so-called "bivalent" vaccine was tested in a trial of more 850 adults, who had all received their first three doses of Moderna's original Spikevax vaccine.

Around half the group then received a fourth dose of Spikevax, while the rest received the bivalent vaccine.

Those who received the bivalent vaccine had significantly higher levels of neutralizing antibodies -- Y-shaped immune system proteins that block the virus -- against Omicron.

On average, these levels were around 75 percent higher in the group who got the bivalent vaccine as a fourth dose compared to those who got the original vaccine as a fourth dose. They also received slightly superior protection to the ancestral strain of Covid compared to Spikevax.

"We are thrilled," said Stephane Bancel, CEO of Moderna in a statement, adding he anticipated this vaccine would be the company's lead candidate for authorization as a booster this fall.

"We want to be as ready as early as August for shipping," he told investors in a call.

Stephen Hoge, the company's president, did concede that antibody levels would be lower against Omicron's sub variants that are now in circulation, but said he believed it was still a superior booster than repeating Spikevax.

The company doesn't yet have data on durability -- how the new vaccine booster will fare three months and six months out.

A panel of Food and Drug Administration experts will meet June 28 to discuss considerations and strategies for boosters in fall and winter.

(L.Barsayjeva--DTZ)