The Russian jab was initially designed to counter possible mutations of the virus
The head of Moscow’s Gamaleya National Center of Epidemiology and Microbiology, which created the Sputnik V Covid-19 vaccine, and the boss of the fund that bankrolled its development, have spoken to RT about a fresh study that has found the jab to be much more effective against the Omicron variant than the German-American Pfizer formula.
A comparative Italian-Russian paper, published earlier this week, revealed that Sputnik V was 2.6 times better in tackling Omicron than the popular Western alternative.
Sputnik V has shown a more-than-eightfold reduction of virus-neutralizing activity against the new super-mutant coronavirus strain, in contrast to a 21.4-fold drop for the Pfizer vaccine, according to the study by Italy’s Lazzaro Spallanzani National Institute for Infectious Diseases and the aforementioned Gamaleya Center. The paper also said Sputnik Light, a one-shot version of the product, provided significantly increased virus-neutralizing activity against Omicron when used as a booster.
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The Sputnik V and Pfizer vaccines offered almost equally strong protection against the original Covid-19, but the Russian jab turned out to be more effective against the new version because “it provides a wider spectrum of virus-neutralizing antibodies for various changing variants of the coronavirus, which will keep popping up in the future,” Alexander Gintsburg, the director of the Gamaleya Center, told RT.
His experts had been considering possible mutations of the virus from the start, and their warnings were taken into account in the design of Sputnik V, Gintsburg pointed out. “Meanwhile, mRNA vaccines [like Pfizer] were developed to only give high protection against the [original] Wuhan strain of Covid-19 and related antigen variants.”
The laboratory survey, carried out by the Italian and Russian virologists, was “very representative and conclusive, but it’s up to the doctors on the frontline to dot the i’s,” he added. In around a week, Russian medial officials will share the number of Sputnik V recipients who have been hospitalized with Omicron. Initial reports suggest that none of them have required in-patient treatment so far, and “let’s hope that this trend continues,” he added.