Updated results on coronavirus vaccination effectiveness
- Details
- Category: Research
Several weeks following the publication of the large real-world COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness study by the Clalit Research Institute in Collaboration with Harvard University in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), additional results focusing on vaccine effectiveness in specific sub-populations have now been published.
Differing immune responses discovered in asymptomatic cases vs those with severe COVID-19
- Details
- Category: Research
The largest study of its type in the UK has identified differences in the immune response to COVID-19, between people with no symptoms, compared to those suffering a more serious reaction to the virus.
Researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, Newcastle University, University College London, University of Cambridge, EMBL's European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) and their collaborators within the Human Cell Atlas initiative, found raised levels of specific immune cells in asymptomatic people.
Patients who are obese or overweight are at risk for a more severe course of COVID-19
- Details
- Category: Research
COVID-19 patients who are overweight or obese are more likely to develop a more severe infection than patients of healthy weight, and they require oxygen and invasive mechanical ventilation more often. There is no increased risk of death . These conclusions, for which more than 7,000 patients were studied, appear from international research in eleven countries, including the Netherlands (Radboud university medical center).
New COVID-19 vaccine may offer broad protection from coronaviruses
- Details
- Category: Research
A COVID-19 vaccine that could provide protection against existing and future strains of the COVID-19 coronavirus, and other coronaviruses, and cost about $1 a dose has shown promising results in early animal testing.
Vaccines created by UVA Health's Steven L. Zeichner, MD, PhD, and Virginia Tech's Xiang-Jin Meng, MD, PhD, prevented pigs from being becoming ill with a pig model coronavirus, porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV).
SARS-CoV-2: New findings on the persistence of neutralizing antibodies
- Details
- Category: Research
It is an open question to what extent protection against reinfection persists after overcoming a SARS-CoV-2 infection. The "Rhineland Study", a population-based study conducted by DZNE in the Bonn area, is now providing new findings in this regard. Blood samples taken last year indicate that an important component of immunity - the levels of specific neutralizing antibodies against the coronavirus - had dropped in
Massive fragment screen points way to new SARS-CoV-2 inhibitors
- Details
- Category: Research
New research published in Science Advances provides a template for how to develop directly-acting antivirals with novel modes of action, that would combat COVID-19 by suppressing the SARS-CoV-2 viral infection. The study focused on the macrodomain part of the Nsp3 gene product that SARS-CoV-2 uses to suppress the host cell's natural antiviral response.
B.1.1.7. variant more transmissible, does not increase severity, Lancet studies suggest
- Details
- Category: Research
Two new studies, published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases and The Lancet Public Health, found no evidence that people with the B.1.1.7. variant experience worse symptoms or a heightened risk of developing long COVID compared with those infected with a different COVID-19 strain. However, viral load and R number were higher for B.1.1.7., adding to growing evidence that it is more transmissible than the first strain detected in Wuhan, China, in December 2019.
More Pharma News ...
- COVID-19 causes 'unexpected' cellular response in the lungs
- Clinical trial completion rates decline during COVID-19 pandemic
- Study identifies possible COVID-19 drugs - including several that are FDA-approved
- COVID-19 convalescent plasma with greater antibody levels is safe and shows promise
- Prioritizing who gets vaccinated for COVID-19 saves lives
- Undetected coronavirus variant was in at least 15 countries before its discovery
- COVID-19 survivors might need just one dose of two-part vaccine