J&J vaccine loses antibody protection against Omicron in lab study
Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine produced some antibodies but showed “no detectable” neutralization of the omicron coronavirus variant in a laboratory experiment, according to Penny Moore, a South African virologist.
Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine produced some antibodies but showed “no detectable” neutralization of the omicron coronavirus variant in a laboratory experiment, according to Penny Moore, a South African virologist.
Moore, a professor at Johannesburg’s University of The Witwatersrand, said that laboratory experiments were conducted on blood plasma samples from people who had had two doses of the Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE vaccine and those or the J&J single-shot inoculation. Moore said the vaccine appears to provide some protection against omicron, perhaps via other means such as stimulation of immune cells.
J&J didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
A measure of antibody levels, called geometric mean titers, fell from 1,419 against the original coronavirus strain to 80 against Omicron among people who received Pfizer shots. The same measure fell from 303 against the original strain to undetectable levels against omicron in those who had received J&J’s shot, Moore said in an online presentation on Tuesday.
“Omicron does indeed exhibit substantial immune escape from antibodies,” she said. “The situation, I think, is even more alarming for the J&J vaccine -- there was no detectable neutralization in our assay.”
Severe Disease
The as-yet-unpublished research Moore presented to an African health conference ties in with early experiments by South Africa’s Africa Health Research Institute and Pfizer’s own research. Omicron’s discovery was announced by South African scientists on Nov. 25.
Still, Moore stressed, the body has other protection against the virus.
“Reduced antibody titers will likely result in a decreased ability of vaccines to prevent infection but protection against severe disease likely to be preserved,” she said on one of her presentation slides.
J&J’s vaccine appears to be preventing severe disease in a study involving hundreds of thousands of South African health workers and no one on the study has died after being infected by the omicron variant, Glenda Gray, the co-lead of the study said in an earlier presentation on Tuesday.
Discovery Health Ltd., the country’s largest medical insurance provider, said earlier today that a two-shot course of Pfizer’s vaccine appeared to offer 70% protection against being hospitalized after infection with the omicron variant. The shots made by Pfizer and J&J are the two currently being used in South Africa.