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Vaccine table update: Feb 28, 2021
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Vaccine table update: Feb 28, 2021

This is starting to get complicated

Katelyn Jetelina
Mar 1, 2021
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Vaccine table update: Feb 28, 2021
yourlocalepidemiologist.substack.com

An update on our vaccine table. The peach color represents new information since my last update.

A few important notes:

  • We naturally want to compare efficacy rates of symptomatic infection across different vaccines. However, I urge you not to do this because it’s like comparing apples to oranges; they are very different trials. Instead, I urge you to compare the rates for severe COVID19 (disease, hospitalizations, and deaths). This is the important stuff.

  • Regarding neutralizing antibodies (because this comes up every time): We do not have “real world” efficacy studies of Pfizer and Moderna against B.1.351. We only have petri dish studies, which can only assess the impact of the new variant on neutralizing antibodies. The number of neutralizing antibodies does NOT easily translate to efficacy. It’s likely the vaccines’ efficacy is reduced “a little” but not “a lot”. Also, the Pfizer and Moderna studies were different types of petri dish studies, so the neutralizing antibody numbers are not comparable between the two.

  • AstraZeneca 65+: I’m getting a lot of questions about this from international followers. Check out the footnote (and link in the Data Sources below) for more information.

Love, YLE

Data Sources:

Special thank you: This is starting to get confusing so I consulted with an amazing YLE follower who also happens to work in the vaccine division at the National Institute of Health. This is the most up to date information we have. I also want to thank her for helping me think through additional rows that should be added.

Moderna:

  • Original FDA document for EUA

Pfizer:

  • Original FDA document for EUA

  • Scotland “real world” study

  • Israel “real world” study

  • Pregnancy trial info

  • Storage change announcement

  • Efficacy after 1 dose

J&J

  • Previous post

  • Original FDA document for EUA

AstraZeneca:

  • Lancet trial info

  • Scotland “real world” study

  • 65+ years old debate

  • Delayed doses study

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Claudette Mo
Mar 1, 2021

Can you comment on the data AZ data that shows higher efficacy when 2 doses are equal or more than 12 weeks apart vs less than 6 weeks, when the recommendation for 2 doses is 4 weeks apart? I know the UK decided to vaccinate as many people as possible with the first dose instead of reserving the second dose. Did they by chance ended up with better efficacy due to that?

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