Moderna says trial results suggest redesigned Covid-19 vaccines can better protect against variants

Moderna said its research showed the promise of a so-called bivalent vaccine. PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - Moderna announced preliminary results Tuesday (April 19) from its study of a coronavirus vaccine intended to protect against variants, saying the findings show it can design a vaccine that offers better, longer-lasting protection than its initial product.

But the company said it was also testing another version of the vaccine that it expected would do even better, with results expected in late May or early June.

The company's findings, published in a paper without being evaluated by outside scientists, offer hope that the nation will have a better vaccine by the fall, when the coronavirus is considered likely to reemerge in force.

Researchers at Moderna, other pharmaceutical companies and the National Institutes of Health have been racing to figure out how to redesign the existing vaccines in time for new booster doses to be manufactured over the summer. Moderna's results are the first of their kind to be released.

The vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech continue to strongly protect most people from hospitalisation and death caused by Covid-19. But their potency against infection wanes quickly.

Federal officials recently authorised additional shots for people 50 and older, citing concerns about waning protection against severe disease in the elderly and those with underlying medical conditions.

Moderna said its research showed the promise of a so-called bivalent vaccine, even against other variants besides the two versions of the virus specifically targeted.

In this case, researchers combined the existing vaccine with one designed to attack the Beta variant, which was first detected in late 2020. They found the combination provided a stronger defence not only against those forms of the virus, but also against the Delta and Omicron variants, the company said.

Volunteers who got a booster shot of the reconfigured vaccine produced more than two times the level of antibodies against the Omicron variant compared with those who got a booster dose of the existing Moderna vaccine.

The added protection persisted for six months against the Omicron variant but fell against Delta to essentially the same level as that elicited by the existing vaccine, the study showed.

Moderna said that while Beta was an early variant, it was relevant to test because it contained several mutations that "have been persistent in more recent variants of concern, including Omicron."

Dr Paul Burton, Moderna's chief medical officer, said he was betting on even better results from combining the existing vaccine with one aimed at Omicron.

While the Beta variant faded months ago, Omicron is producing a stream of subvariants, including BA.1 and BA.2, and many experts suggest it is probably the best target for a new vaccine.

Given the ability of the Omicron variant to evolve, Dr Burton said, "I think we have to just assume it is going to be major player, still, in the fall."

Moderna's researchers measured levels of antibodies - the body's first line of defence in warding off infection from the coronavirus. Other immune responses that also defend against Covid-19 disease were not measured; those tests are far more complex and time-consuming to conduct.

Dr Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, said the failure to analyse the strength of memory B cells and T cells, which are a powerfully protective part of the immune system's response, is the Achilles' heel of studies like Moderna's.

At a recent meeting of the Food and Drug Administration's vaccine advisory board, of which he is a member, Dr Offit asked an expert with the National Institutes of Health whether such research was underway.

The expert, Dr John Beigel, who is directing studies similar to Moderna's, described such data as critical. In a recent interview, though, he said that while antibody levels provide only a partial picture of the immune system's response, "keeping antibody levels high is important."

He said that at least to some degree, those levels reflect vaccine effectiveness.

Dr Jesse Goodman, a former chief scientist at the FDA, said Moderna's results were promising but did not conclusively prove that a bivalent vaccine would be better than existing ones.

He said the control group that received Moderna's existing booster was drawn from a different study, so there was not a direct, head-to-head comparison between those volunteers and the ones who got the bivalent vaccine.

For example, the volunteers were not all given a booster shot at the same time after their second shot, which he said could affect the results. "That is a significant uncertainty in the study," he said.

Dr Burton said Moderna's results on its Beta bivalent vaccine were "very reassuring" both in terms of safety and the immune response. But he said the company was eager for results by June from its bivalent vaccine aimed at the Omicron variant. Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said that vaccine "remains our lead candidate" for a booster this fall.

If a bivalent vaccine that targets the Beta variant works well against Omicron, Mr Burton said, one that targets Omicron itself would presumably work even better. He said he hopes the other study will show high and lasting levels of antibodies against both Delta and Omicron.

"That two months is worth waiting for," he said. Ultimately, federal officials are aiming for a once-a-year booster shot.

Of about 900 volunteers in the Beta bivalent trial, one-third got a 50-microgram dose of the updated vaccine - the same dosage now authorised for a booster shot of the existing vaccine.

The rest received a 100-microgram dose. The volunteers had fewer side effects from the weaker dose, and Dr Burton said the company would probably settle on that dosage.

The study was not intended to evaluate vaccine effectiveness; it only measured the immune system's response, which can point to efficacy.

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