Moderna says protection from its Covid-19 vaccine still strong six months on
NEW YORK (REUTERS) – Moderna said on Tuesday (April 13) that its Covid-19 vaccine still showed strong protection against the illness six months after people received their second shot, with efficacy of more than 90 per cent against all cases of Covid-19 and more than 95 per cent against severe Covid-19.
The vaccine maker, which will be updating investors on the progress of its vaccines at an event on Wednesday, said the six-month follow-up of its original late-stage study of the vaccine showed that vaccine efficacy remained consistent with its previous updates.
The company has also started testing new versions of the vaccine that target a concerning new variant of the coronavirus, which was first identified in South Africa and is known as B.1.351.
It said both versions of the vaccine that it is testing, including a multivalent vaccine that combines the newly designed vaccine with the previous one, increased neutralising antibody titers against variants of concerns in mice, with the multivalent providing the broadest level of immunity.
The company in March began testing three approaches to boosting the vaccine in order to protect against new variants.
Moderna’s vaccine is authorised or approved for use in more than 40 countries. It uses messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, which contains instructions for human cells to make proteins that mimic part of the coronavirus.
The instructions spur the immune system into action, turning the body into a virus-zapping vaccine factory. No actual virus is contained in the vaccines.
The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company said that as of Monday it has delivered about 132 million doses globally, including 117 million doses for the United States. The company said it is on track to supply the nation with 300 million doses of the vaccine by the end of July.
Moderna said its supply chain outside the United States was established about a quarter behind the US supply chain and continues to ramp up.
The company said its average US selling price in the first quarter was around US$15.40 per dose excluding a roughly US$1 billion (S$1.3 billion) payment from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, which is part of the US Department of Health and Human Services.
Outside the United States, prices ranged from US$22 to US$37 per dose, it said.
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