01 February 2021

Which Covid-19 vaccines does the UK have access to?

01 February 2021

The UK’s supply of coronavirus jabs over the next two years now totals 407 million doses, ministers said, after the Government ordered millions more doses of the Valneva Covid-19 vaccine candidate.

The decision comes after trial results were published for two other vaccines, from Johnson & Johnson’s pharmaceutical arm Janssen and Novavax.

All three vaccines are yet to be approved for use by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

Here are the vaccines the UK has access to:

– What types of vaccine have been ordered?

– Adenoviral vaccines: These are based on weakened versions of adenoviruses, which are a group of viruses that typically infect membranes of the eyes, respiratory tract, urinary tract, intestines and nervous system, and include the common cold.

– mRNA vaccines: Traditional vaccines are made up of small or inactivated doses of the whole disease-causing organism, or the proteins that it produces, which are introduced into the body to provoke the immune system into mounting a response. But mRNA vaccines trick the body into producing some of the viral proteins itself.

How the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine works (PA Graphics)

– Inactivated whole virus vaccines: Inactivated vaccines contain whole bacteria or viruses which have been killed, or small parts of bacteria or viruses, such as proteins or sugars, which cannot cause disease.

– Protein adjuvant vaccines: An adjuvant is added to some vaccines to enhance the immune response, and has been shown to create a stronger and longer lasting immunity against infections than the vaccine alone.

The use of an adjuvant may reduce the amount of vaccine protein required per dose, which allows more vaccine doses to be produced.

The UK has placed orders for vaccines from:

– BioNTech and Pfizer 

Type: mRNADoses: 40 million – enough for 20 million people

The vaccine is being rolled out across the UK, having been approved for use on December 2 last year.

– Oxford and AstraZeneca 

Type: AdenovirusDoses: 100 million – enough for 50 million people

How the Oxford Covid-19 vaccine works (PA Graphics)

The jab is being administered throughout the UK, after getting the green light from the MHRA on December 30.

– Moderna

Type: mRNADoses: 17 million – enough for 8.5 million people

The jab from the US biotech firm has been approved for use in the UK, but doses will not be available until the spring.

– Novavax 

Type: Protein adjuvant.Doses: Under the in-principle agreement, the UK has secured 60 million doses of the Novavax vaccine

The UK is providing infrastructure to Novavax in running a phase three clinical trial in the UK, and plans to manufacture its vaccine in the UK with Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies.

Results from those trials show the vaccine offers 89% protection against Covid-19, but it still requires approval from the MHRA, which could take several weeks.

– Janssen

Type: AdenovirusDoses: Some 30 million doses have been secured from Janssen, which is owned by Johnson & Johnson

Results from clinical studies show the jab is 66% effective overall at preventing moderate to severe Covid-19 28 days after vaccination.

Deliveries of the vaccine are expected in the second half of 2021, should it receive approval from the MHRA.

– Valneva 

Type: Inactivated whole virusDoses: Pending approval, the original order for 60 million is set for delivery in the second half of this year and now the option for a second batch of 40 million doses has been triggered. These have been earmarked for delivery in 2022.

Valneva’s site in Livingston, West Lothian, will manufacture the vaccine.

Clinical trials are ongoing, with the early-stage phase 1/2 study expected to read out within the next three months.

The jab is expected to be given as two doses.

– GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and Sanofi Pasteur

Type: Protein adjuvantDoses: 60 million

Clinical trials for the vaccine are ongoing. Interim results of early phases of the trial showed an immune response comparable to patients who recovered from Covid-19 in adults aged 18 to 49 years, but a low immune response in older adults.

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