The encouraging results from an analysis of blood of participants in
trials are based on more extensive analysis than those released by
the U.S. drugmaker last week.
Last week, Pfizer said a similar laboratory study showed the vaccine
was effective against one key mutation, called N501Y, found in two
highly transmissible new variants spreading in Britain and South
Africa.
The latest study, posted on bioRxiv.org but not yet peer reviewed,
was conducted on a synthetic virus with 10 mutations that are
characteristic of the variant known as B117 identified in Britain.
Among the 11 authors of the study are Ugur Sahin and Oezlem Tuereci,
co-founders of BioNTech. Sahin is chief executive and his wife
Tuereci is chief medical officer.
It provides further hope as record numbers of daily deaths from
COVID-19 are reported in Britain, which is believed to be driven by
the more transmissible variant. It also means vaccine development
would for now not have to start all over again.
For the test, blood samples drawn from 16 vaccinated participants in
prior clinical trials were exposed to a synthetic virus called
pseudovirus which was engineered to have the same surface proteins
as B117, as characterised by 10 hallmark mutations.
The antibodies in the blood of the volunteers given the vaccine,
known as Comirnaty, or BNT162b2, neutralised the pseudovirus as
effectively as the older coronavirus version that the product was
initially designed for.
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BioNTech has said it plans to
publish a more detailed analysis of the likely
effect of its vaccine on the South African
variant within a few days. The
variants are said by scientists to be more transmissible than
previously dominant ones, but they are not thought to cause more
serious illness.
The world is pinning its hopes on vaccines to rein in the
coronavirus, first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan at
the end of 2019, as many countries impose tighter and longer
lockdowns to try to bring the pandemic under control.
Experts have called for continued testing to establish whether
vaccines will protect people as the virus mutates. COVID-19 has
killed more than 2 million people worldwide.
AstraZeneca, Moderna and CureVac are also testing whether their
respective shots will protect against the fast-spreading variants.
They have not released the results of those tests.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Josephine Mason and Nick
Macfie in London)
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