South Africa Mulls AstraZeneca Again in Light of Delta Protection

Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash

Four months after selling off one million AstraZeneca vaccine doses, South Africa is considering buying more of them to contain the spread of the Delta variant.

The Delta variant is much more transmissible than previous strains, including the beta variant. However, the government presented data on 26 June showing a 70% efficacy against it with the AstraZeneca vaccine. The vaccine, which of June 2021 comprises over 90% of all doses supplied through COVAX globally, will have a significant impact as the Delta variants spread.

The government may approach the Serum Institute of India for the shots, deputy health minister Joe Phaahla told lawmakers on Wednesday.
This would add to supplies as the health regulator considers approving Russia’s Sputnik V and China’s Sinovac inoculations, he said, adding that he hoped to secure these doses from India’s Serum Institute.

In March, also facing expiry on the doses, the government sold off its doses to the African Union after research showed the then dominant Beta variant was resistant.

In February, University of the Witwatersrand Professor of Vaccinology Shabir Madhi said the AstraZeneca vaccine had a roughly 20% efficacy in preventing mild disease from the Beta variant.

“We don’t want to go back to the original argument of whether its limited efficacy on the Beta variant was correct, to dispose of it, to sell it to other countries,” Phaahla said. “With the current information that it is quite efficacious when it comes to the Delta, it is already registered.”

A study by the University of Oxford,demonstrates that AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine, will provide protection against the Delta and Kappa variants; formerly the ‘Indian’ variants. The study investigated the ability of monoclonal antibodies from recovered or vaccinated people to neutralise the Delta and Kappa variants. 

Neutralisation against the Delta and Kappa variants was comparable with that seen against the Alpha and Gamma variants, with no evidence of widespread antibody escape as seen with the Beta variant. These results indicate that the vaccines could be effective in real-world settings. The Phase III COV002 trial in the UK showed vaccine efficacy of 70.4% at preventing symptomatic COVID against the Alpha variant, when measured more than 14 days after a second dose.

Furthermore, a recent analysis by Public Health England showed early evidence of real-world data that two doses of AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine are effective against the Delta variant, with similar levels of protection achieved as those seen against the Alpha variant.

Sources: BusinessTechAstraZeneca

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