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Covid: New Oxford vaccine 'ready by the autumn' to tackle mutations


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A vaccine to tackle the coronavirus variants could be ready to deploy by the autumn should it be needed, the Oxford-AstraZeneca team says.

 

Prof Andy Pollard, from Oxford University, said tweaking a vaccine was a relatively quick process and would only need small trials before roll-out.

 

It comes as the UK announced more than 10 million people had received a jab.

 

There is still strong evidence existing vaccines work well against the mutations that have emerged.

 

Although their overall effectiveness may be weakened a little.

 

The comments came after results released by the team showed the first evidence the vaccine can reduce the chances of people catching and passing on the virus, which has always been uncertain.

 

The data, which has not yet been published or reviewed, showed vaccination with the Oxford-AZ jab could cut transmission by up to 67%.

 

This means the vaccine could significantly slow the spread of the virus, potentially allowing restrictions to be lifted more quickly, as well as protect people from becoming seriously ill and dying with Covid-19.

 

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the results were "absolutely superb" and showed vaccines are "the way out of this pandemic" but that the "on-going challenge" would be for vaccine manufacturers to keep up with what the virus is doing.
 

He described the fact that 10 million people had received their first dose of a vaccine as a "hugely significant milestone" and said "every jab makes us all a bit safer".

 

There is most concern about the South African variant, which shows signs of being able to escape some of the protective effect of the vaccines. There are already signs this has begun circulating in some parts of the UK, prompting surge testing to be introduced into parts of London, Surrey, Kent, Hertfordshire and Southport.

 

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Prof Pollard said his team were already looking at updating the vaccine to make it more effective against the mutations that are being seen.

 

"I think the actual work on designing a new vaccine is very, very quick because it's essentially just switching out the genetic sequence for the spike protein.

 

"And then there's manufacturing to do and then a small scale study. So all of that can be completed in a very short period of time, and the autumn is really the timing for having new vaccines available for use," he said.

 

It's not yet clear how the new vaccine would be given to people, but it is possible it could take the form of a one-dose booster which is updated and rolled out every year or so.

 

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