Pfizer and BioNTech, two leading American Covid vaccine makers, have announced that three doses of their vaccines would be effective against Omicron variant. Sharing their preliminary findings, both the companies said that two jabs of their vaccines are effective against the Covid-19, but third doze is essential to stay safe from the Omicron variant.
Omicron has caused global concern over signs that it can transmit faster than previous strains and fears that its multiple mutations could help it evade immune defences provided by vaccines. No deaths have so far been associated with the variant.
In preliminary results published today, Pfizer and BioNTech said their vaccine โis still effective in preventing Covid-19, also against Omicron, if it has been administered three timesโ.

But they warned that โthe Omicron variant is probably not sufficiently neutralised after two dosesโ.
According to early laboratory research using blood serum from vaccinated people, a booster third dose generated around the same level of antibodies against Omicron as is seen after a second dose with the initial strain.
Blood samples from people who had received two doses of the current vaccine showed on average a 25-fold reduction in neutralising antibodies compared to the early strain of the virus, the companies said.
But they added that another part of the immune response โ from T cells โ were probably still effective against the variant, adding that โvaccinated individuals may still be protected against severe forms of the diseaseโ. Their results have not been peer reviewed.

Real world test
Speaking at a press conference, BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin said that reducing the time required between second and third doses of the vaccine was the โright way to goโ to increase protection through the winter.
The United Kingdom has begun giving booster shots to individuals at least three months after their second dose, while the delay to receive an additional shot is longer elsewhere.
The vaccine-makers said that an Omicron-specific version of the jab, currently in development by BioNTech, would be ready for delivery by March, pending regulatory approval.
The decision to switch production to the tailored vaccine would depend โon the spread of the Omicron variantโ, the German companyโs chief operating officer Sierk Poetting said at a press conference.
The announcement comes after other preliminary results from a small study in South Africa suggested there was up to a forty-fold drop in the ability of the antibodies from the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to neutralise Omicron, compared to the earlier Beta variant.
The results suggest โthat there is definitely much less neutralisation against Omicron compared to neutralisation against the original strains that came out of Wuhan initially,โ said Willem Hanekom, executive director of the Africa Health Research Institute, which carried out the study.

