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COVID vaccine excitement builds as Moderna reports third positive result - Nature.com

A nurse gives a volunteer an injection

Moderna’s phase III vaccine trial has enrolled about 30,000 participants.Credit: Hans Pennink/AP/Shutterstock

They say good news comes in threes. For the third time in a week, a coronavirus vaccine developer has reported preliminary results suggesting its vaccine is highly effective.

Today, biotech company Moderna in Cambridge, Massachusetts, reported that its RNA-based vaccine was more than 94% effective at preventing COVID-19, based on an analysis of 95 cases in its ongoing phase III efficacy trial.

But scientists say that the press-released results share a few more details than last week’s positive announcements from Pfizer and BioNtech, which are together working on a rival RNA vaccine, and from Russian developers behind the controversial ‘Sputnik V’ vaccine. Moderna released figures suggesting that its vaccine was likely to prevent severe COVID-19 infections, something that was not clear from the other developers’ announcements.

“We need to see the peer-reviewed data, but by any standards, this looks like more very good news,” says Daniel Altmann, an immunologist at Imperial College London.

“The results of this trial are truly striking,” says Anthony Fauci, the director of US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease in Bethesda, Maryland, the vaccine’s co-developer. Fauci says he told reporters several months ago that he would be satisfied with a vaccine that was 70% or 75% effective, and that one that prevented 95% of cases would be “aspirational”. “Well our aspirations have been met and that is very good news,” he adds.

Genetic instructions

Moderna was one of the first developers to announce that it was working on a COVID-19 vaccine and to move testing to clinical trials in humans. Its vaccine is comprised of RNA instructions for cells to produce a modified form of the coronavirus spike protein, the immune system’s key target against coronaviruses. It began a phase III trial that has enrolled roughly 30,000 people on 27 July.

That trial continues. But an analysis conducted on 15 November by an independent data safety committee found that 95 participants in the trial had developed COVID-19. Of these, 90 were in the group that received a placebo injection and 5 received the vaccine, which equates to an efficacy of 94.5%. Pfizer and BioNtech reported a greater than 90% efficacy on the basis of 94 cases, whereas Sputnik V’s 92% efficacy was measured with only 20 COVID-19 cases recorded.

But the Moderna vaccine’s final efficacy might drop once the trial is completed — although probably not by much, says Stephen Evans, a statistical epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The interim data suggests that the efficacy could be as low as about 86%, because of statistical uncertainty, he says. “What it is saying to me is that both the Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna vaccine have notably more efficacy than most scientists would have expected.”

Moderna also presented some evidence that their vaccine protects against severe cases of COVID-19 — something that Pfizer/BioNtech and Sputnik’s press releases did not mention. The Moderna interim analysis found a total of 11 severe cases in the trial’s placebo arm, and none in the vaccine arm, according to the press release. That’s a good sign, says Evans, but hardly surprising given the vaccine’s high effectiveness. “If a vaccine starts to get to that kind of efficacy, then there isn’t a lot of room for severe cases in there,” he says.

In its guidelines for emergency approval of COVID vaccines, the US Food and Drug Administration has said that efficacy trials should include at least 5 severe cases in the placebo group to gain approval.

Open questions

As with the other vaccines, uncertainties remain. It is not clear how long the vaccine’s protective effects last; whether it can block people from transmitting the virus; or whether the vaccine works as well in higher-risk groups such as older adults. The company reported that, of the 95 cases, 15 were in people over 65, but it didn’t indicate in which arm of the trial these participants were.

A key question will be how many of the five infections among vaccinated individuals occurred in people over 65, says Evans, which could indicate whether the vaccine is less effective in that group, compared to others. He thinks that’s unlikely, based on data showing that older participants generate a strong immune response to the vaccine. In the press release, Moderna said “Preliminary analysis suggests a broadly consistent safety and efficacy profile across all evaluated subgroups.”

Researchers were also buoyed by Moderna’s announcement that its vaccine remains stable in conventional refrigerators for a month and an ordinary freezer for six months; Pfizer’s vaccine must be stored at –70C before delivery, which means it could be difficult to distribute to parts of the world that do not have such infrastructure.

That’s “a really big plus,” says Altmann. “We’ve always said that we need a number of vaccines ready and that the devil will be in the detail.”

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COVID vaccine excitement builds as Moderna reports third positive result - Nature.com
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