Moderna
CEO says vaccine likely to protect for 'couple of years'
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[January 07, 2021]
PARIS (Reuters) - Moderna's COVID-19 mRNA
vaccine is likely to offer protection of up to a couple of years, its
chief executive said on Thursday, even though more data is still needed
to make a definitive assessment.
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The U.S. biotech company, which stunned the world last year by
coming up with a vaccine against the disease caused by the new
coronavirus in just a few weeks, received approval for its shot from
the European Commission on Wednesday.
Given vaccines development and pharmacovigilance usually requires
years, the protection duration of COVID-19 shots is a lingering
question for scientists and regulators.
"The nightmare scenario that was described in the media in the
spring with a vaccine only working a month or two is, I think, out
of the window," Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said at an event
organised by financial services group Oddo BHF.
"The antibody decay generated by the vaccine in humans goes down
very slowly (...) We believe there will be protection potentially
for a couple of years."
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Bancel added his company was
about to prove that its vaccine would also be
effective against variants of the coronavirus
seen in Britain and South Africa.
Scientists have said newly developed vaccines
should be equally effective against both
variants.
(Reporting by Matthias Blamont and Sarah White;
editing by Jason Neely and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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