Antibodies Triggered By Sinovac’s COVID-19 Vaccine Decline Below Key Threshold From Around Six Months After Second Dose For Most Recipients.
Antibodies triggered by Sinovac’s COVID-19 vaccine decline below a key threshold from around six months after a second dose for most recipients, although a third shot could have a strong boosting effect, according to a lab study. Chinese researchers reported the findings from a study of blood samples from healthy adults aged between 18 to 59 in a paper published on Sunday (Jul 25), which has not been peer reviewed.
For participants receiving two doses, two or four weeks apart, only 16.9 per cent and 35.2 per cent respectively still had a level of neutralising antibodies above the threshold six months after the second dose, the paper said. Those readings was based on data from two cohorts involving more than 50 participants each, while the study gave third doses to a total of 540 participants.
When participants in some cohorts were given a third dose, about six months after the second, neutralising antibody levels after a further 28 days had increased around three to five fold from the levels seen four weeks after the second dose, the study showed.
The study was conducted by researchers at disease control authorities in Jiangsu province, Sinovac, and other Chinese institutions.
Researchers cautioned the study did not test the antibodies’ effect against more transmissible variants, and that further research was needed to assess antibody duration after a third shot.
This news was originally published at Channel News Asia.