Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

Britain to test mixing and matching of COVID-19 vaccines

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2021 01:12 AM
  • Britain to test mixing and matching of COVID-19 vaccines

British scientists are starting a study Thursday to find out if it's OK to mix and match COVID-19 vaccines.

The vaccines being rolled out now require two doses, and people are supposed to get two shots of the same kind, weeks apart.

Guidelines in Britain and the U.S. say the vaccines aren't interchangeable, but can be mixed if the same kind isn’t available for the second dose or if it’s not known what was given for the first shot.

Participants in the government-funded study will get one shot of the AstraZeneca vaccine followed by a dose from Pfizer, or vice versa.

“This study will give us greater insight into how we can use vaccines to stay on top of this nasty disease,” said Jonathan Van Tam, the U.K.'s deputy chief medical officer.

He said that given the challenges of immunizing millions of people amid a global vaccine shortage, there would be advantages to having data that could support more “flexible” immunization campaigns.

COVID-19 vaccines all train the body to recognize the coronavirus, mostly the spike protein that coats it. The ones from AstraZeneca and Pfizer use different technologies. AstraZeneca's uses a common cold virus to carry the spike gene into the body. Pfizer's is made by putting a piece of genetic code called mRNA — the instructions for that spike protein — inside a little ball of fat.

The British research is scheduled to run 13 months and will also test different intervals between doses, four weeks and 12 weeks apart.

A study published this week on the Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine showed it was about 91% effective in preventing COVID-19. Some immunologists credit the fact that the vaccine uses two slightly different shots, made with similar technology to AstraZeneca's.

But the AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines are "so different that it’s really hard to know if that would work,” said Alexander Edwards, an associate professor in biomedical technology at Britain's University of Reading.

Matthew Snape, the new study's leader at Oxford University, which helped develop the AstraZeneca vaccine, called for British volunteers over age 50 to sign up; scientists are hoping to enrol more than 800 people.

If the vaccines can be used interchangeably, "this will greatly increase the flexibility of vaccine delivery," he said in a statement. "(It) could provide clues as to how to increase the breadth of protection against new virus strains.”

In recent weeks, Britain, the European Union and numerous other countries have been hit with vaccine supply issues: AstraZeneca said it would dramatically reduce the expected number of doses it could deliver due to manufacturing delays and Pfizer also slowed deliveries while it upgraded its Belgian factory.

MORE International ARTICLES

Twitter Users Have Fun Over Toddlers' Race In US

A video clipping about a toddlers' race on a basketball court in the US evoked some funny responses from the Twitter users.

Twitter Users Have Fun Over Toddlers' Race In US

Chennai Space Enthusiast Finds Vikram Debris On Moon: NASA

A space enthusiast from Chennai who worked independently, found a debris from the Vikram moonlander that scientists had been looking for and helped guide them to the spot where it had crashed.

Chennai Space Enthusiast Finds Vikram Debris On Moon: NASA

2 Indian Students Dead In Us Hit-And-Run

Two Indian students were killed in a hit-and-run incident in the US state of Tennessee, with the accused surrendering himself to the police, media reports said.

2 Indian Students Dead In Us Hit-And-Run

Mob Attacks Offices Of Pakistan Newspaper 'Dawn' After It Says London Attacker Is 'Pakistan Origin Man'

The Dawn newspaper in its headline had identified Usman Khan, a convicted Islamist terrorist from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir who stabbed two people to death in a terror attack on London Bridge last week, as "UK national of Pakistani origin".  

Mob Attacks Offices Of Pakistan Newspaper 'Dawn' After It Says London Attacker Is 'Pakistan Origin Man'

'I'm Not A Billionaire. I Can't Fund My Own Campaign’: Kamala Harris Drops Out Of 2020 Presidential Race

California’s powerful India-origin Democratic Senator Kamala Harris told her supporters on Tuesday that she was ending her bid for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

'I'm Not A Billionaire. I Can't Fund My Own Campaign’: Kamala Harris Drops Out Of 2020 Presidential Race

San Bernardino Man Arrested In Thanksgiving Shooting Death Of 25-Year-Old Indian Student Abhishek Sudhesh

A US man has surrendered to the police in California's San Bernardino for the killing of Indian student Abhishek Sudhesh and was immediately arrested, authorities said.

San Bernardino Man Arrested In Thanksgiving Shooting Death Of 25-Year-Old Indian Student Abhishek Sudhesh