One vaccine shot leaves many vulnerable to Covid variants, UK study finds

Posted By : Telegraf
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Individuals who receive one shot of the Covid-19 vaccine and have never been infected by the virus could be very vulnerable to new variants, according to a new UK study.

Researchers from Imperial College London, Queen Mary University of London and University College London looked at immune responses in healthcare workers who had received one shot of the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine.

The scientists found that people who had not previously been infected by Covid-19 showed very low levels of neutralising antibodies against the original strain from Wuhan, the B.1.1.7 variant first identified in Kent and B.1.351 from South Africa.

By contrast, those who had previously had mild or asymptomatic infection and then received a single dose appeared to have greatly enhanced protection against both B.1.1.7 and B.1.351, demonstrating high neutralising antibodies and a strong response by T cells, which remember past infection.

One dose without prior infection “does look very very feeble, especially against new variants,” said Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial. “Our message would be hold on in there until you get your second dose.”

But, Altmann added, prior infection coupled with a single shot of the vaccine elicited a “stupendous reaction”. “Prior infection rescues your response against variants,” he said.

The Imperial paper was released shortly after the first detailed study of “vaccine failure” in the UK, commissioned by the government’s Scientific Advisory Group on Emergencies (Sage), found that more than 500 elderly people developed Covid-19 symptoms severe enough for them to be hospitalised at least three weeks after vaccination, 113 of whom later died.

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The Sage research, undertaken by the Isaric Coronavirus Clinical Characterisation Consortium, analysed 52,280 patients hospitalised from December 8 when the UK vaccine rollout began.

Patients who had been vaccinated more than three weeks previously and should have benefited from immune protection against Covid-19 made up 1 per cent of the hospitalised sample. About one-fifth of this group died from the disease.

Professor Calum Semple of the University of Liverpool, Isaric co-lead, said: “This is real-world data showing that the vaccines work but it is not unexpected that it also shows some vaccine failure — mostly in the frail elderly population.”

He added that the absolute numbers of people dying this way were “very small” compared to the total vaccinated population.

The researchers say the overall findings show that vaccination greatly reduces the risk of hospitalisation and death, consistent with clinical trial results, though the design of their study does not allow them to calculate an overall efficacy figure for the vaccines.

The US Centers for Disease Control published a detailed case-controlled study this week of 417 patients in 24 hospitals, which found that the BioNTech/Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were 94 per cent effective at preventing hospitalisation after two doses and 64 per cent after one dose. Most people in the UK Isaric study had received only their first dose of Pfizer or Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.

The CDC is also carrying out a broader survey of what it calls “vaccine breakthrough cases” of Covid-19 in the US. By April 20, it had received 7,157 reports of infections in people who had been fully vaccinated, including 498 hospitalisations and 88 deaths.

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“Reported vaccination breakthrough cases will represent an undercount,” said CDC, because the data are incomplete and depend on voluntary reporting. “No vaccines are 100 per cent effective at preventing illness. There will be a small percentage of people who are fully vaccinated who still get sick, are hospitalised or die from Covid-19.”

Semple made the same point about the Isaric research. “We feel this is a story about vaccine success, but within broader society there is suspicion of vaccine data,” he said, adding that the study was a response to “the feeling by some that we were not looking hard enough at vaccine failure”.

Dr Annemarie Docherty of Edinburgh university, a co-author of the Isaric study, said: “We are talking about statistics but if it is your granny who was vaccinated and died later with Covid, it is a personal tragedy.”

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