Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Immunity against Omicron still unknown: experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Dec, 2021 05:11 PM
  • Immunity against Omicron still unknown: experts

Experts and global health leaders say it's still too soon to tell whether the Omicron variant will significantly threaten immunity gained from current COVID-19 vaccines as calls grow in some corners for expanded booster shots.

Pfizer released a press release Wednesday saying that while two doses of its vaccine appear to be less effective against the new threat, a booster dose may offer important protection by raising antibody levels.

Pfizer's data, which hasn't been reviewed by the scientific community, also suggested that two doses of the vaccine should still protect against severe disease with Omicron, since the variant's mutations don't appear to hamper T-cell defences that fight the virus after infection sets in.

The Omicron variant, discovered late last month, carries an unusually large number of mutations on its spike protein, which is what the current mRNA vaccines target.

Cynthia Carr, an epidemiologist in Winnipeg, said the extent of those changes are still unknown. But even significant mutations likely won't hamper vaccine effectiveness entirely.

Carr likened the antibody response to a baseball fielder wearing a glove, with the ball representing the COVID-19 virus trying to enter our cells. A fielder can catch the ball to make the out — extinguishing the viral threat before it even embeds itself.

"If that ball changes shape to a football, it doesn't quite fit the glove, but you still know what you're looking for and it's not a zero chance of catching the ball," Carr said. "It doesn't evade entirely ... but it's more challenging.

"But that's where your T-cells are so important, because they get in there and chase the antigen and kill it to help the antibodies that are blocking it."

Pfizer said one way to increase protection against the Omicron variant is with a third dose of its current vaccine, developed with Germany's BioNTech. The pharmaceutical company and others are also working on an Omicron-specific shot that will likely need clinical trials before it's made available to the public.

Omar Khan, a biomedical engineering expert with the University of Toronto, said third doses of the already approved jabs work by boosting antibody levels, which is especially important for older members of the population and those with weakened immune systems.

Khan said antibody levels naturally drop over time and are re-triggered when exposed to the pathogen.

"But in the face of imminent exposure and to save people from being infected, you can boost their antibody levels (with a third dose)," he said. "That way, when they're imminently exposed, they're already ready to fight because they have more antibodies.

"They're a little less efficient, but there's enough of them to cover it."

Scientists are still racing to learn how easily Omicron spreads, whether it causes more severe illness than previous variants, and how much it might evade the protection of prior vaccination.

Pfizer said blood samples taken a month after a booster showed Omicron-neutralizing antibody levels that were similar to amounts sparked by the initial two doses, which proved protective against earlier variants.

While some Canadian experts urge jurisdictions to accelerate third-dose rollouts to larger portions of the population — most provinces allow boosters for older or immunocompromised people and health-care workers six months after their second dose — Khan said more research is likely needed before expanding eligibility to everyone.

"Informed decisions need scientific data and we need more time for that data," he said.

The World Health Organization's chief scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, shared a similar message in a briefing Wednesday, saying "it's premature" to know whether a drop in neutralizing antibodies will result in "significant reduction in vaccine effectiveness."

However, Jason Kindrachuk, a virologist with the University of Manitoba, said it's better to be "proactive" on third doses in order to slow transmission of Omicron before it becomes a larger problem in Canada — and to continue staving off the still-circulating Delta variant.

"We're getting data telling us that two doses is not going to offer us complete protection from infection (against Omicron) and we're going to see more breakthroughs," he said, pointing to preliminary studies from South Africa as well as Pfizer's non-reviewed data.

"We have to do everything we can to protect and conserve our health-care system and certainly the health of those (vulnerable) people, but also stop transmission because the more transmission there is, the more potential for new variants to emerge."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

156 COVID19 cases over 3 days

156 COVID19 cases over 3 days
79.9% (3,701,843) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 53.2% (2,464,201) have received their second dose.

156 COVID19 cases over 3 days

Canada is extending its ban on direct flights to India until at least August 21

Canada is extending its ban on direct flights to India until at least August 21
Canada has extended the ban on incoming passenger flights from India for another month til August 21, 2021. The federal government is not renewing the travel ban for Pakistan. 

Canada is extending its ban on direct flights to India until at least August 21

Fully vaccinated U.S. citizens can enter Canada Aug. 9, rest of world Sept. 7

Fully vaccinated U.S. citizens can enter Canada Aug. 9, rest of world Sept. 7
Officials say the 14-day quarantine requirement will be waived beginning the second week of August for eligible travellers who are currently residing in the United States and have received a full course of a COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in Canada.

Fully vaccinated U.S. citizens can enter Canada Aug. 9, rest of world Sept. 7

Canada to receive 7.1 million COVID-19 vaccines

Canada to receive 7.1 million COVID-19 vaccines
The federal government is expecting to receive about 7.1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines this week, as it adjusts its distribution strategy amid waning vaccination rates and substantial supply. The new deliveries will include about 3.1 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and four million doses of Moderna.

Canada to receive 7.1 million COVID-19 vaccines

Canada, allies blame China for cyberattack

Canada, allies blame China for cyberattack
Canada joined the United States and other allies on Monday in blaming China for a massive cyberattack that compromised tens of thousands of computers around the world earlier this year.

Canada, allies blame China for cyberattack

Church destroyed by fire in Surrey, B.C.

Church destroyed by fire in Surrey, B.C.
Surrey Fire Service assistant chief Shelley Morris says the St. George Coptic Orthodox Church was engulfed in flames by the time crews arrived at around 3:30 a.m.

Church destroyed by fire in Surrey, B.C.