Moderna Says Omicron-Specific Booster Protects Better Than Original
Moderna's redesigned "bivalent" booster shot provides stronger protection than a fourth shot of its original mRNA covid vaccine, the company said in a news release. It plans to submit the data to the Food and Drug Administration soon with hopes that it could be available by the end of summer.
Moderna said Wednesday that using a new version of its Covid-19 vaccine as a booster led to a superior antibody response against the Omicron variant compared to its current shot. The company said it plans to submit its data to the Food and Drug Administration in the coming weeks and that it hopes that the new booster will be available in the late summer. (Herper, 6/8)
The study didn鈥檛 measure the efficacy of the modified booster shot鈥攚hether it actually reduces the risk of Covid-19 disease caused by Omicron. The company disclosed the results in a press release. The data haven鈥檛 been published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. Moderna鈥檚 modified, 鈥渂ivalent鈥 booster shot was designed to target in a single shot both the Omicron variant and the original coronavirus strain. The company鈥檚 original vaccine, Spikevax, was designed to target the original coronavirus, both as a two-dose primary series and as a booster shot. (Loftus, 6/8)
Moderna鈥檚 preliminary study results show people given the combination shot experienced a higher boost in omicron-fighting antibodies than if they just got a fourth dose of the original vaccine. 鈥淲e believe strongly that this data supports an update of the vaccine,鈥 Dr. Stephen Hoge, Moderna鈥檚 president, said Wednesday. (Neergaard, 6/8)
The new shot, called mRNA-1273.214, was tested in a Phase 2/3聽clinical trial of 437 people at 50 micrograms 鈥 the same dosage given in the current booster shot.聽The new shot was generally well-tolerated, the company said, with side effects similar to those with a booster dose of its existing vaccine. Moderna has only announced the trial results in a news release; the data have not yet been made available to outside scientists for review. (Lovelace Jr., 6/8)