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Coronavirus variants could be dealt with via single jab: UK scientist

Coronavirus variants could be dealt with via single jab: UK scientist
Passengers wearing protective masks walk to the check-in counters at O.R. Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa, December 22, 2020. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 March 2021

Coronavirus variants could be dealt with via single jab: UK scientist

Coronavirus variants could be dealt with via single jab: UK scientist
  • Prof. Andrew Pollard said his team is working on an inoculation that will act as a catch-all for a number of emergent variants
  • Prof. Andrew Pollard: The work at the moment is partly to understand whether a vaccine for one of them, Brazilian and South African variants, might actually protect against both

LONDON: A single booster jab may be enough in future to protect people from the Brazilian and South African variants of coronavirus, a leading British scientist has suggested.

Prof. Andrew Pollard, head of the Oxford University group that developed a vaccine in partnership with AstraZeneca, said his team is working on an inoculation that will act as a catch-all for a number of emergent variants, rather than on a case-by-case basis, by targeting similarities in their mutations.

Three main variants — the UK, South African and Brazilian ones — have been identified in recent months, all known to carry the N501Y mutation, which affects transmissibility.

The latter two are known to have a further mutation known as E484K, which makes the virus more resistant to antibodies. 

These mutations have raised fears that current vaccines might prove inefficient against new variants.

But Pollard said the world needs to move on from its “obsession” with variants as they emerge, and with the right amount of research, a new booster could be available by the autumn. 

“There’s some similarities between the Brazil variant and the South African variant, and so the work at the moment is partly to understand whether a vaccine for one of them might actually protect against both,” he told The Times. “New designs of vaccines can be made as and when they’re needed.”

Pollard said both the Oxford and Pfizer vaccines had produced “stunning” results so far, reducing the risk of hospitalization by as much as 80 percent with just a single jab.