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Medicine

Booster Doses are Powerful, May Fight Omicron, Researchers Find (theweek.co.uk) 399

Last week researchers at Northwestern University calculated that one week after a Covid-19 booster shot, median antibody levels were 23 times higher than before the shot.

This Thursday the Times of London reported that another study found similar results: Booster jabs "massively" strengthen the body's defences against Covid, according to key results that have raised hopes of strong protection from the Omicron variant. A third dose not only increased antibody levels thirtyfold, but roughly tripled levels of T-cells, a part of the immune system that experts believe could be the critical weapon against the heavily mutated Omicron strain.
Professor Saul Faust, who led the study, emphasized to the Guardian that "These are remarkably effective immunological boosters, way above what is needed to prevent hospitalisation and death."

And speaking to The Week, Faust also added that "This T-cell response gives us hope," because although Omicron was not specifically analysed during the research, their data suggested the triggered T-cells "are recognising a much broader range of antigens that might... be common to all of the variants."

And earlier this week long-time Slashdot reader destinyland shared more booster/Omicron news from The Hill: On Sunday, former FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb, who sits on Pfizer's board of directors, said vaccine developers have "a pretty good degree of confidence" that people who have received booster doses on top of their initial COVID-19 vaccinations are protected against omicron. "If you talk to people in vaccine circles, people who are working on a vaccine, they have a pretty good degree of confidence that a boosted vaccine, so three full doses of vaccine, is going to be fairly protective against this new variant," he said.
Meanwhile, new Omicron-specific vaccines are also just months away, Business Insider reports: Pfizer said it will be able to manufacture and distribute an updated version of its COVID-19 vaccine within 100 days if the new variant Omicron is found to be resistant to its current vaccine... "Pfizer and BioNTech have taken actions months ago to be able to adapt the mRNA vaccine within six weeks and ship initial batches within 100 days in the event of an escape variant," the company said in a statement...

"We expect more data from the laboratory tests in two weeks at the latest. These data will provide more information about whether B.1.1.529 could be an escape variant that may require an adjustment of our vaccine if the variant spreads globally," a spokesperson told Reuters.

Moderna and Johnson & Johnson are also preparing to respond to the Omicron's possible threat. Moderna on Friday said it plans to test a variant-specific booster in the event that its current vaccine is found to be ineffective against the Omicron.

And The Hill also reports: Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Monday he has "a very high level of confidence" that his company's COVID-19 treatment pills are effective against the omicron variant... Bourla said Paxlovid was designed in anticipation of future possible mutations. "So that gives me very, very high level of confidence that the treatment will not be effected, our oral treatment will not be effected by this virus."
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Booster Doses are Powerful, May Fight Omicron, Researchers Find

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  • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Saturday December 04, 2021 @01:45PM (#62046761)
    If this pandemic had happened 50 years ago, it would have been far more devastating. That modern medical science has allowed us to develop not just one but multiple vaccines, as well as monoclonal antibody treatments, is a truly wonderful thing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by istartedi ( 132515 )

      50 years ago it probably wouldn't have happened. Lab leak or not, Nixon had just begun to open trade with China and international travel to Wuhan was probably just about nil. Within China itself, mobility was much lower. It probably would have been quarantined locally and even the news wouldn't have gotten out. There's a distinct possibility that outbreaks have happened in remote villages before with no record.

      Compare and contrast this with the 1918 flu which hitched a ride out on the perfect storm: s

      • 50 years ago it probably wouldn't have happened.

        No, it would just have happened more slowly. The Black Death managed to spread out of China in medieval times even though it took almost five decades to reach as far as the UK.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      But 50 years ago we didn't have cheap air travel, and so the pandemic wouldn't have happened in the first place. 50 years ago, more countries were less developed, and so a disease that might have started in a wet market wouldn't travel far beyond the city that it originated from.
      • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Saturday December 04, 2021 @02:35PM (#62046943)

        But 50 years ago we didn't have cheap air travel, and so the pandemic wouldn't have happened in the first place. 50 years ago, more countries were less developed, and so a disease that might have started in a wet market wouldn't travel far beyond the city that it originated from.

        Pandemics have historically been quite able to spread even on slow boats. Give the large number of asymptomatic carriers, I think COVID would have spread globally just fine. Spanish flu made people very ill very quickly, and still managed to get everywhere (though admittedly WW1 helped in that regard).

        • Influenza and Covid are airborne and are also spread by rodents, birds and bats, so it gets around the world without aircraft really quickly also.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Rather than Spanish flu you mean, of course, the Kansas Flu. H1N1 did not start in Spain -- they merely got mouthy about it and were rewarded by having that particular version of the Influenza virus be called by the moniker "Spanish Flu".

      • While air travel was not as common in 1971 as it is today it was still done plenty. 50 years ago was not the stone age.
      • But 50 years ago we didn't have cheap air travel, and so the pandemic wouldn't have happened in the first place.

        You don't need air travel to be cheap, you just need travel at a speed fast enough for a virus to not kill the host or alert the authorities before arrival, and 50 years ago we had that in spades.

        The first transatlantic flight happened a year after the *global* pandemic known as the Spanish flu, a pandemic which affected Europe, America, Australia, India, and Japan in the first wave, then South Africa, South America, West Africa, Russia, China and the Middle East in the second wave.

    • If this pandemic had happened 50 years ago, it would have been far more devastating.

      For one thing, conspiracy theorists posting flyers and mailing letters to each other would have caused a shortage of paper and overloaded the Postal Service.

  • Higher antibody levels = better protection against infection?
    Better protection against hospitalization?
    Against winding up on ICU?
    Against death?

    Ah right... none of the above. Just a metric, that may, or may not apply to currently circulating Covid variants. No data on the emerging variant of interest (Omicron).

    Yes - currently circulating in most parts of the world is the Delta variant. Against which vaccination (2 doses, for most vaccines) was supposed to give sufficient protection?

    So these boos

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