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COVID19: Delaying second dose of vaccine increases risk of new resistant strain, Sage papers reveal

Asian News Hub by Asian News Hub
January 23, 2021
in Medical Science
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Warning over ‘realistic possibility’ of resistant strains of the virus emerging

Asian News Hub Asian News Hub Asian News Hub

London, Jan 23: Delaying doses of coronavirus inoculations will increase the chances of a vaccine-resistant strain of Covid-19 emerging, scientists have warned.

In new reports, released by the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), experts also warned that resistant new variants were a “realistic possibility” driven by the virus reacting to increasing levels of natural immunity among the population.

In papers released on Friday, Sage scientists said there was an “increased risk of virus replication under partial immunity after one dose than after two doses, so in the short term, delaying the second dose would be expected to somewhat increase the probability of emergence of vaccine resistance – but probably from a low base.

“Is such an increase material?

It is not currently possible to quantify the probability of emergence of vaccine resistance as a result of the delayed second dose, but it is likely to be small.

“In the current circumstances the unquantifiable but likely small probability of the delayed second dose generating a vaccine escape mutant must be weighed against the measurable benefits of doubling the speed with which the most vulnerable can be given vaccine-induced protection.”

But the paper added: “Given what we have observed recently with the variants B.1.1.7 and B1.351, it is a realistic possibility that over time immune escape variants will emerge, most likely driven by increasing population immunity following natural infection.”It warned: “Vaccine efficacy after one dose should be carefully monitored to inform future vaccine policy.”

Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser, told a Downing Street press conference on Friday that the virus was likely to be around “forever”, adding:

“The most risky thing in terms of new mutation is to have very high prevalence. The more the virus is transmitting and replicating between people the more likely it will get a mutation, and that is what is happening around the world”.

That’s the biggest risk.

“There is always some risk if you start to have partial immunity, but there is also a benefit which is partial immunity can actually stop the infection quicker.”

Chris Whitty, the U.K government’s chief medical adviser, said:

“All of medicine is about balance of risk. Our overall view was that the balance of risk was firmly in favour at this stage of the epidemic in the UK of having many more people vaccinated but that does mean a delay. That particular risk was a much smaller risk of not having people vaccinated which was the alternative.”

All viruses mutate and natural variations in the Sars-CoV-2 virus have been identified across the globe and the Sage paper said this was likely to happen at a “faster rate” as greater numbers of people become immune after infection.

It added: “Most mutations will be inconsequential, but a few may, by chance, confer a functional advantage over others and, through natural selection may become dominant laboratory-generated variants.”

It said there was “theoretical and experimental data supporting the possibility” that the virus could generate new variants which would “evade” antibody therapies, convalescent plasma, and vaccines as well as natural immunity.

The paper said vaccinated people who went on to develop Covid-19 need to have their virus genetically sequenced “as quickly as possible to understand whether viral variation may explain the breakthrough”.

Increased sequencing of tests would help identify new clusters and spot changes as they emerge after the vaccine rollout.

Asian News Hub

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