‘Great news’ as Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine proves 94% effective in real world


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A real-world test of Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine in Israel has found it is 94 per cent effective at preventing severe diseases after two shots, a milestone moment for countries desperate to end lockdowns and reopen economies.

Up until now, most data on the efficacy of Covid-19 vaccines has come under controlled conditions in clinical trials, leaving an element of uncertainty over how results would translate into the real world with its unpredictable variables.

The research in Israel – two months into one of the world's fastest roll-outs, providing a rich source of data – showed two doses of the Pfizer shot cut symptomatic Covid-19 cases by 94 per cent across all age groups, and severe illnesses by nearly as much.

The study of about 1.2 million people also showed a single shot was 57 per cent effective in protecting against symptomatic infections after two weeks, according to the data published and peer-reviewed in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday.

The results of the study for the Clalit Research Institute were close to those in clinical trials last year which found two doses were found to be 95 per cent effective.

"We were surprised because we expected that in the real-world setting, where the cold chain is not maintained perfectly and the population is older and sicker, that you will not get as good results as you got in the controlled clinical trials," senior study author Ran Balicer told Reuters.

"But we did and the vaccine worked as well in the real world," he said

"We have shown the vaccine to be as effective in very different subgroups, in the young and in the old in those with no co-morbidities and in those with few co-morbidities," Mr Balicer added.

Coronavirus around the world - in pictures

  • A shipment of the Sinovac vaccine is unloaded from a Thai airways flight at Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok, Thailand. AP
    A shipment of the Sinovac vaccine is unloaded from a Thai airways flight at Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok, Thailand. AP
  • People eat at a restaurant, in a neighbourhood among those that have seen some of the highest number of city Covid-19 deaths, in the Queens borough of New York City. AFP
    People eat at a restaurant, in a neighbourhood among those that have seen some of the highest number of city Covid-19 deaths, in the Queens borough of New York City. AFP
  • From left: House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, with members of Congress observe a moment of silence during an event held at Capitol Hill to honour the 500,000 people in the US who have died from Covid-19.
    From left: House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, with members of Congress observe a moment of silence during an event held at Capitol Hill to honour the 500,000 people in the US who have died from Covid-19.
  • Chairs are stacked near the windows of a classroom ahead of in-person learning at the Jefferson-Houston School in Alexandria, Virginia. Reuters
    Chairs are stacked near the windows of a classroom ahead of in-person learning at the Jefferson-Houston School in Alexandria, Virginia. Reuters
  • A woman walks through a disinfection booth while entering a town village in Pasay City, south of Manila, Philippines. EPA
    A woman walks through a disinfection booth while entering a town village in Pasay City, south of Manila, Philippines. EPA
  • Health personnel transport a patient infected with the coronavirus to the General Hospital of the Ciudad Juarez, in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. EPA
    Health personnel transport a patient infected with the coronavirus to the General Hospital of the Ciudad Juarez, in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. EPA
  • A doctor looks at the X-rays of a patient's lungs at the central hospital in Kolomyia, western Ukraine. AP
    A doctor looks at the X-rays of a patient's lungs at the central hospital in Kolomyia, western Ukraine. AP
  • A medical worker takes a nasal sample from a soldier at a coronavirus testing site in Seoul, South Korea. AP
    A medical worker takes a nasal sample from a soldier at a coronavirus testing site in Seoul, South Korea. AP
  • People walk past a temporarily closed branch of a sandwich shop in London's financial district during England's third coronavirus lockdown. AP
    People walk past a temporarily closed branch of a sandwich shop in London's financial district during England's third coronavirus lockdown. AP
  • A worker sprays disinfectant inside a school bus in Yongchuan, in central China's Hunan province. AFP
    A worker sprays disinfectant inside a school bus in Yongchuan, in central China's Hunan province. AFP
  • A woman and her child feed pigeons in Bogota, Colombia. AFP
    A woman and her child feed pigeons in Bogota, Colombia. AFP
  • Riot police are seen during a demonstration by workers of bars and restaurants against the restrictions set by the Bogota Mayor Claudia Lopez in Bogota, Colombia. AFP
    Riot police are seen during a demonstration by workers of bars and restaurants against the restrictions set by the Bogota Mayor Claudia Lopez in Bogota, Colombia. AFP

The news came as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that he aims to have vaccinated all eligible people and to have reopened the country by April 5.

Israel has been importing Pfizer-BioNTech PFE. N, BNTX. O and Moderna Inc MRNA. O vaccines.

Speaking to reporters in Tel Aviv, Mr Netanyahu said all eligible Israelis, 16 years of age and up, were expected to have been inoculated by the end of March, allowing a full reopening of the economy by April.

On Tuesday Israel said it was giving small amounts of surplus COVID-19 vaccines to Palestinian-run territories as well as to several countries.

The study also suggests the vaccine, developed by US drugmaker Pfizer and Germany's BioNTech, is effective against the coronavirus variant first identified in the UK.

Researchers said they could not provide a specific level of efficacy, but the variant was the dominant version of the virus in Israel at the time of the study.

The research did not shed light on how the Pfizer shot will fare against another variant, now dominant in South Africa, that has been shown to reduce the efficacy of other vaccines.

Of the 9 million people in Israel, a nation with universal healthcare, nearly half have received a first dose, and a third have received both doses since the roll-out began on December 19.

This made the country a prime location for a real-world study into the vaccine's ability to stem the pandemic, along with its advanced data capabilities.

The study examined about 600,000 vaccinated people against the same sized control group of unvaccinated people.

Researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital also collaborated.

"This is more great news, confirming that the vaccine is around 90 per cent effective at preventing documented infection of any degree of severity from 7 days after the second dose," said Peter English, a British government consultant in communicable disease control.

"Previous recently studied papers from Israel were observational studies. This one used an experimental design known as a case-control study ... giving greater confidence that differences between the groups are due to their vaccination status, and not to some other factor."

The study published on Wednesday was the first analysis of a national Covid-19 vaccination strategy to be peer-reviewed.

It also offered a more detailed look at how the vaccine was faring at weekly intervals, while matching people who received the shot to unvaccinated individuals with similar medical histories, sex, age and geographical characteristics.

Other research centres in Israel, including the Weizmann Institute of Science and the Israel Institute of Technology have shared several studies in recent weeks that show the vaccine to be effective.

At least three studies out of Israel have also suggested the vaccine can reduce coronavirus transmission, but the researchers have cautioned that wider studies must be conducted in order to establish clear-cut conclusions.

The Weizmann Institute's latest data shows a dramatic drop in illness – which began this month with the first age group vaccinated, the over-60s – has now extended to the two subsequent groups to have completed both doses.

As infections have fallen in Israel, the country has eased its third national lockdown and reopened swathes of its economy including malls, shops, schools and many workplaces in the past two weeks.

Recreational venues such as theatres, gyms and hotels opened on Sunday, but are open only to those deemed immune – holders of a "Green Pass", a health ministry document available for download only by people seven days after their second dose or people who have recovered from Covid-19.

On Wednesday, Tel Aviv held one of the country's first live concerts after months of gatherings being banned under coronavirus restrictions.

"This is so exciting, we are really so happy to be here today. It's unbelievable after one year of staying at home, it's great to be out to see some culture," said 60-year-old Gabi Shamir as she took her seat at the open-air show.

Still, the vaccine's efficacy does not mean the country will be pandemic free any time soon. Like elsewhere in the world, a large proportion of the population are under 16 – about a third in Israel – meaning that they cannot yet get vaccinated as there have not been clinical trial results for children.

"This is definitely not the end of the pandemic," said Eran Kopel, an epidemiologist at Tel Aviv University.

"Once there is a safe vaccine for the children in Israel and all over the world we can then start to say that we could be approaching herd immunity."

 

 

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