EXTRAORDINAR:
O COLABORARE INTRE EST SI VEST PENTRU
SALVARE DE VIETI OMENESTI!
AstraZeneca
and Russia’s Sputnik V lab to share data in seeking coronavirus vaccine
advances / AstraZeneca anunță că va combina vaccinul său experimental împotriva
Covid-19 cu cel rusesc (Sputnik V) iar romanilor prin TRATATE le sunt
"restrictionate" medicamentele rusesti... doar pentru ca ne sunt
adversari politici!
Cand odata
cu medicamentele am putea fi "ajutati"- cu rusii nu mai avem granita-
sa ne REINTREGIM TARA, un deziderat romanesc la care se opun occidentalii! DE
CE OARE SE TEM DE ROMANIA REINTREGITA!
Pai daca ziceam MARE ma acuzau de
"nationalism"! la cata minte
au! si nu prea te poti astepta la orice!
Virgil Ciuca
New York
12/12/2020
AstraZeneca
anunță că va combina vaccinul său experimental împotriva Covid-19 cu cel rusesc
(Sputnik V), pentru a vedea dacă această variantă de ser este mai eficientă.
AstraZeneca
anunță că va combina vaccinul său experimental împotriva Covid-19 cu cel rusesc
(Sputnik V), pentru a vedea dacă această variantă de ser este mai eficientă. -
Biziday
AstraZeneca
and Russia’s Sputnik V lab to share data in seeking coronavirus vaccine
advances.
Anglo-Swedish
pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca developed its vaccine in collaboration with
the University of Oxford.
Anglo-Swedish
pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca developed its vaccine in collaboration with
the University of Oxford. (Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images)
By
Robyn Dixon
and
Rick Noack
Dec. 11,
2020 at 7:45 p.m. GMT+2
MOSCOW — The
developers of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine will share science with pharmaceutical
giant AstraZeneca to explore possible advances against the coronavirus, both
sides said Friday, in the first major collaboration of labs that were in the
frenzied vaccine hunt.
It also is a
further sign of the unprecedented pace of vaccine research. Efforts are
already underway for improvements and second-generation formulas, even before
the widespread distribution of the first crop of vaccines from labs in the
United States, Europe, China and elsewhere.
The research
is aimed at testing new vaccine formulas using cold viruses, said a statement
by the Anglo-Swedish AstraZeneca, which could work in tandem with Russia’s
Gamaleya National Center of Epidemiology and Microbiology, whose Sputnik V uses
two injections based on vectors of the common-cold virus, or adenovirus.
Developing
versatile immunisation programmes against COVID-19 through po...
The
AstraZeneca vaccine, created with the University of Oxford, uses a cold virus
that typically infects chimpanzees.
That teaches
the human immune system to block the novel coronavirus.
Coronavirus
News and
updates about the coronavirus pandemic: Cases in the US, death toll, what you
need to know about the vi...
AstraZeneca
“will soon begin exploring within Russia to understand whether two
adenovirus-based vaccines can be successfully combined,” the company said.
Russia said
AstraZeneca had agreed to explore using a Sputnik V “component” as part of
efforts to create an improved vaccine.
For Russia —
which trumpeted the partnership in tweets from a Sputnik V account — the deal
offers a chance to further promote its flagship vaccine, which is still in
Phase 3 trials but became available for health-care workers and others this
week in Russia.
Initial
interest at Moscow clinics for the shots, however, appeared limited as many
Russians remained wary of the vaccine.
The potential collaboration also sets up contrasts as wealthy countries snap up the early supplies of the promising vaccines from U.S.-based Moderna and Pfizer, which worked with Germany’s BioNTech.
The
AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, which is still awaiting regulatory
approval,
has been promoted by the company as a “vaccine for the world,” with an eye to
affordability and global reach.
Russia says
it has orders for 1.2 billion doses from more than 40 countries in Asia, Latin
America, Africa, Central Asia, India and other regions.
The
AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, left, and Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine. (Left: John
Cairns/University of Oxford/AFP/Getty Images.
Right: Olga
Maltseva/AFP/Getty Images)
The British
government also recently announced that it would begin testing combinations of
two technologies, pairing one dose of a viral-vector vaccine like the one from
AstraZeneca with a messenger RNA vaccine, the technology used in the
Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
AstraZeneca
said in a statement that such combinations “could help unlock synergies in
protection and improve vaccine accessibility and could provide an additional
approach to help overcome this deadly virus.”
The news
comes as setbacks were announced Friday for two Western vaccines, one developed
by France’s Sanofi and Britain’s GlaxoSmithKline and the other by Australia’s
University of Queensland.
Russian
officials said Thursday that Sputnik V’s efficacy is 96.5 percent, compared with
70 percent for the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine.
The British
medical journal the Lancet on Tuesday published a peer-reviewed paper on the
AstraZeneca vaccine, but questions lingered about how well it worked in people
over 55 and about results showing better outcomes with an initial half-dose.
Full
scientific data on Sputnik V has not been released, but Russia has promised to
provide access to all data to any country interested in the vaccine.
AstraZeneca
vaccine details published in Lancet, but data suggests need ...
AstraZeneca
and Oxford hope the peer-reviewed journal study will help speed approval.
“We offered
@AstraZeneca to use one of our vectors so they can also have two vectors in
their vaccine. AZ confirmed,” the developers of Sputnik V tweeted Friday.
“The new
chapter of vaccine cooperation has started today,” another tweet announced. “We
made an offer and AstraZeneca accepted it. It all happened here on Twitter!”
Russia’s
decision to register and roll out the vaccine before Phase 3 trials were
completed was criticized as reckless by some Western scientists. But Russian
officials have grown increasingly hostile and defensive at what they see as
Western attacks designed to discredit Russia’s vaccine for commercial reasons.
Igor
Konashenkov, a Russian military spokesman, on Friday attacked what he called a
foreign-funded “information sabotage” effort against Sputnik V from inside and
outside Russia.
Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that the United States and its allies were
trying to exploit the pandemic, creating a global vaccine race.
Russia had
called for global cooperation to defeat the threat, he said, “but
unfortunately, a number of countries, primarily the Americans and their allies,
are trying to use this situation in their geopolitical interests, putting their
selfish interests above those of all humanity.”
AstraZeneca
vaccine details published in Lancet, but questions remain
Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Friday denounced unspecified “dirty tricks . . . to
discredit our vaccine” and told journalists that “there should not be any
rivalry on the vaccine market.”
Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine at a
clinic in Moscow last week.
Russia’s
Sputnik V vaccine at a clinic in Moscow last week. (Maxim
Shipenkov/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Sputnik V’s
developers on Friday also offered to share the Russian vaccine with France’s
Sanofi and Britain’s GlaxoSmithKline to boost their vaccine’s efficacy.
Sanofi and
GSK announced Friday that their vaccine would be delayed until the end of next
year after their trial found a low immune response in older adults.
“#Sputnik V
is willing to share its technology with Sanofi and GSK to help in developing
their next vaccine,” the Russian Direct Investment Fund, backer of Sputnik V,
tweeted.
“A
partnership of different producers is the way of the future.”
So far,
150,000 Russians have been vaccinated with the Sputnik V vaccine, Gamaleya
Center Director Alexander Gintsburg said Thursday. Only front-line health
workers and teachers qualify to get the shot in mass vaccinations at government
health clinics that opened this week. The Russian military is also offering
vaccines to service members.
Polling in
Russia shows that many Russians remain skeptical about being vaccinated, with
anti-vaccine conspiracy theories circulating online, and that some Russians are
convinced the coronavirus does not exist. Any collaboration with a major
Western drug company could boost Russian government efforts to encourage
Russians to get vaccinated.
Clinical
trials of a second Russian vaccine, developed by the Vector Center, began
already last week.
The global
price of the Sputnik V vaccine has been set at about $20 for two shots..
Russian
developers say the vaccine can be stored at about - 18 degrees, making it
easier to store and transport than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which must be
kept at ultracold temperatures( minus 70).
The
AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, however, can be stored long term at ordinary
refrigerator temperatures.
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