Sinopharm
protein-based booster stronger against Omicron than earlier shot - study
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[January 07, 2022]
BEIJING (Reuters) - A protein-based
COVID-19 vaccine made by Sinopharm, when given as a booster after two
doses of an earlier shot from the Chinese firm, elicited a stronger
antibody response against the Omicron variant than a third dose of the
original, a study showed.
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The study, which was published on Tuesday and had not been peer
reviewed, came amid concerns over the effectiveness of Sinopharm's
BBIBP-CorV shot, one of the two leading COVID-19 vaccines exported
by China, against the Omicron variant.
An earlier study showed a BBIBP-CorV booster had weaker
neutralisation against Omicron than against an older coronavirus
strain from the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
Sinopharm's NVSI-06-07 protein-based vaccine, approved for emergency
use as a booster in the United Arab Emirates in December, adopts a
different technology than the BBIBP-CorV shot that contains an
inactivated form of the coronavirus.
Among 192 healthy adults vaccinated with two BBIBP-CorV doses for
six months or longer, the neutralising antibody level against
Omicron in those later given a NVSI-06-07 booster was "significantly
higher" than that in those who received a BBIBP-CorV third dose,
researchers said in a paper.
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The antibody-based results are
different from the efficacy readings about how
well the NVSI-06-07 booster after BBIBP-CorV
vaccination would protect people from
Omicron-caused disease.
The authors of the paper, including researchers
from Sinopharm's units and Sheikh Khalifa
Medical City in Abu Dhabi, cautioned that it
remained unclear for how long the NVSI-06-07
booster's effect would last.
(Reporting by Roxanne Liu and Ryan Woo; Editing
by Alexander Smith)
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