Novavax COVID-19 vaccine appears 89% effective in UK study

A UK study for Novavax’s coronavirus vaccine shows it appears to be 89% effective, based on early findings.

It also appears to work – but not quite as well – against the new strains of COVID-19 that were first found in England and South Africa.

The announcement comes amid worries over whether the vaccines being rolled out around the world will be strong enough to protect against the new variants.

The UK variant is thought to be around 70% more infectious – and more deadly – than the original coronavirus strain that started the global pandemic.

The study of 15,000 people in Britain is still underway, but an interim analysis found 62 participants so far have been diagnosed with COVID-19 – only six of them in the group that got the vaccine, and the rest who received placebo shots.

The infections occurred at a time when the UK was experiencing a jump in COVID-19 caused by the more contagious variant.

A preliminary analysis found over half of the trial participants who became infected had the mutated version.

The numbers are very small but Novavax said they suggest the vaccine is nearly 96% effective against the older coronavirus and nearly 86% effective against the new variant.

Scientists have been even more worried about a strain first discovered in South Africa that carries different mutations – and results from a smaller Novavax study suggests the vaccine does work but not nearly as well as it does against the variant from Britain.

The South African study included some volunteers with HIV. Among the HIV-negative volunteers, the vaccine appears 60% effective.

Including the immune-compromised volunteers, overall the protection was 49%, the company said. While genetic testing still is underway, so far about 90% of the COVID-19 illnesses found in the South African study appear due to the new mutant.

The preliminary findings may help Novavax win authorization for its vaccine in Britain but the US government is funding a far larger study that’s still recruiting volunteers.

Vaccines against COVID-19 train the body to recognize the new coronavirus, mostly the spike protein that coats it.

But the Novavax candidate is made differently than the first shots being used. Called a recombinant protein vaccine, the Maryland company uses genetic engineering to grow harmless copies of the coronavirus spike protein in insect cells.

Scientists extract and purify the protein and then mix in an immune-boosting chemical.

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