Sputnik V Maintains Higher Omicron-Antibody Levels: Preliminary Study

MOSCOW (Reuters) – A small preliminary laboratory study has shown that levels of Omicron-neutralizing antibodies of people vaccinated with Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine did not decline as much as of those who had Pfizer shots.

The joint Russian-Italian study – funded by the Russian Direct Investment Fund, which markets Sputnik V abroad – compared the blood serum of people who had received the different vaccines.

The preliminary study was conducted by scientists from the Spallanzani Institute in Italy and Gamaleya Institute in Moscow, the developer of the adenoviral-vector-based Sputnik V vaccine.

Researchers said samples taken three to six months after the second dose of a vaccine showed that neutralization activity against Omicron had declined – relative to protection against an early-2020 version of the virus – by less in Sputnik V recipients than seen in those vaccinated with Pfizer’s mRNA vaccine.

The decrease in neutralizing antibody titer to Omicron was 8.1-fold in Sputnik V recipients and 21.4-fold in recipients of the Pfizer vaccine, according to the results published on the medRxive website ahead of peer review.

However, in both groups, Omicron-neutralizing antibody geometric mean titers (GMT) were extremely low. In Sputnik V recipients, GMT against a Wuhan D614G version of the virus was 58.5 as compared with GMT 7.2 for Omicron. Among Pfizer vaccine recipients, GMTs were 72.7 and 3.4, respectively.

The study included 51 people vaccinated with Sputnik V and 17 after two shots of the Pfizer vaccine.

“Today the necessity of third booster vaccination is obvious,” the authors write.

The study found that Omicron-specific neutralizing antibodies were detected in the serum of 74.2% of the people vaccinated with Sputnik and in 56.9% of those vaccinated with Pfizer/BioNtech.

An earlier preliminary study by the Gamaleya Institute, the developer of Sputnik V, showed that a booster shot of Sputnik Light vaccine provided a stronger antibody response against Omicron than the two-dose Sputnik V vaccine alone.

“Partnership of different platforms is the key…boosting with Sputnik Light will help strengthen efficacy of other vaccines in light of combined Delta and Omicron challenge,” the head of RDIF Kirill Dmitriev said in a statement.

Omicron has pushed COVID-19 case figures to record highs in parts of western Europe and the United States. But the variant has only now began to hit Russia, where the daily nationwide new infections spiked to 38,850 on Tuesday from 33,899 the day before.

Russia has so far officially recorded more than 1,600 cases of the variant and has mobilised its health system to tackle an increase in cases but authorities said they realised that there are many more cases related to Omicron.

SOURCE: https://bit.ly/3nKTfDX medRxiv, online January 19, 2022.

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