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Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Gates Foundation backs COVID R&D at AI firm Exscientia

 Artificial intelligence-based drug discovery company Exscientia is stepping up its search for new COVID-19 medicines, thanks to an award by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. 

The $1.5 million grant will be used to develop a new class of small-molecule inhibitors of Mpro , a protease enzyme essential for the replication of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

Exscientia said inhibitors of the enzyme could be used as a standalone antiviral therapy against SARS-CoV-2 as well as other coronaviruses, or as part of combination therapy with other drugs.

“The project’s goal is to identify potential pan-coronavirus therapeutics that could be effective against COVID-19, and also new mutations or other SARS viruses that may emerge,” said the UK biotech in a statement.

Orally-active drugs could be used to treat less severe, non-hospitalised cases of COVID-19. The only antiviral authorised for use against SARS-CoV-2 – Gilead’s Veklury (remdesivir) – is delivered as an infusion so is used only to treat severely ill patients in hospital.

Exscientia is also leading the small molecule drug design activities of the EU-backed CARE (Corona Accelerated R&D in Europe) consortium set up last year, sharing funding of almost €78 million ($92 million).

CARE is also focused on using ‘in silico’ screening and profiling of candidate drugs for SARS-CoV-2 and future coronaviruses, along with repurposing other medicines and finding SARS-CoV-2 neutralising antibodies.

“The danger of new emerging strains and mutations of coronavirus means there is an urgent need for new antiviral drugs in this pandemic alongside vaccines, to respond more quickly in potential future coronavirus pandemics,” according to Exscientia’s senior portfolio manager Dr Denise Barrault.

“We believe that the world needs innovation to accelerate the discovery of more effective counter-measures for a range of infectious diseases, including COVID-19,” she added.

Last year, Exscientia claimed a first by becoming the first company to take an AI-designed drug into the human testing stage – a candidate for obsessive-compulsive disorder partnered with Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma (DSP).

Since then, the company has started trials of two other drugs – Evotec-partnered cancer immunotherapy EXS-21546 and another DSP candidate for Alzheimer’ disease psychosis – reinforcing the potential of AI-based drug discovery.

The latest Gates Foundation grant comes on top of earlier awards for tuberculosis, malaria and non-hormonal contraceptives which were announced earlier this year.

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/gates-foundation-backs-covid-rd-at-ai-firm-exscientia/

When and how will we know if we need Covid-19 booster shots?

 There’s a lot we don’t yet know about the data behind Pfizer and BioNTech’s renewed push to change their two-shot Covid vaccination series to a three-shot regimen. But as various factions bicker about whether a third shot is going to be needed, one thing is certain: The final decision will not rest with the companies.

Public health officials, not pharmaceutical executives, will be making the final call on when and whether booster shots will be needed. Pfizer and other manufacturers will surely try to push for approvals; Moderna is already testing a Delta-variant-specific booster. Depending on how their conversations go with vaccine regulators at the Food and Drug Administration, companies may apply for a change to their emergency use authorizations (or to the vaccine license, if they secure one before applying to change their vaccine label to a three-dose one).

But unless the FDA agrees to the change, and unless the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends use of an additional booster — in some or all of the people who got the Pfizer shot — this will remain a two-dose vaccine.

Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s Covid adviser, made that clear after a Monday meeting with Pfizer, where the company briefed key administration advisers on its as-yet-unpublished data. The company has said the data show that “a third dose may be needed within 6 to 12 months after full vaccination.”

Fauci said that anyone who thinks a decision on booster shots is imminent isn’t reading the situation correctly.

“As [FDA acting commissioner] Janet Woodcock reminded everyone, we’re talking about issues that are regulatory issues and public health recommendation issues and Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices issues,” Fauci told STAT. “We’re a long way from that.”

“People are jumping the gun here.”

Pfizer has said explicitly that it’s ready to work with regulatory agencies and let scientific data guide the next steps — a point it made clear, again, in a statement after that Monday meeting. “Both Pfizer and the U.S. government share a sense of urgency in staying ahead of the virus that causes Covid-19, and we also agree that the scientific data will dictate next steps in the rigorous regulatory process that we always follow,” the company said.

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the meeting was a courtesy discussion about the data. He would not comment on the results, saying they were shared confidentially.

Deciding to add a third shot to the Pfizer series comes with all sorts of other opportunity costs, too — including further delaying access to vaccine for low- and middle-income countries. The director-general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, was highly critical Monday of Pfizer’s push for boosters, stressing health workers and older adults in countries without access to vaccine must be a higher priority than people who are already fully vaccinated.

“There are scientific issues. There are ethical issues,” said John Moore, an immunologist at Weill Cornell Medicine. “What is the priority? In America, at the moment, it’s getting doses 1 and 2 out to as many people as possible, particularly in undervaccinated regions. … And a booster for people who got their vaccine less than six months ago doesn’t seem to be on the same degree of urgency.”

Then there’s the question of how to pay for it. The U.S. has already spent billions of dollars on acquiring mRNA vaccines: So far, it’s bought 500 million doses from Moderna and another 300 million from the Pfizer-BioNTech partnership, with options for more. It’s not clear whether the administration and pandemic-response agencies like BARDA can buy the additional doses without cash from Congress. Practically, there’s little chance that Capitol Hill would refuse to fund the extra vaccine doses — it’s just a question of whether formally approving the new spending could pose an unnecessary delay.

The administration wants “to have maximum optionality, including depending on what is most effective with children under the age of 12, including if there is a booster shot needed,” Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, said on Monday. “So that certainly has long been in our planning, even in advance of knowing whether that will be a recommendation made by our health experts.”

Moore said all experts he has spoken to believe people may need additional Covid shots later. “Nobody is saying ‘never,’” he said. But the decision will need solid science behind it.

“Public policy should not be determined by pharmaceutical companies. They need to be determined by CDC, FDA, NIH — all of the science and health specialists available in the Biden administration.”

Below, we lay out how we got here and the implications of a booster decision.

What do we know about Pfizer’s data so far? 

Pfizer and BioNTech’s doozy of an announcement last week said that data from the Israel Ministry of Health showing that vaccine efficacy declined six months post-vaccination was “consistent with an ongoing analysis” from their own Phase 3 studies — the ones that justified the approval of the vaccine.

The crucial Phase 3 data that support that conclusion — and the company’s push for a third booster — have not yet been made public in any other way. Pfizer has since said that it has submitted that data to a medical journal, but it’s not clear when that will be published. “We’re still finalizing our plans to share the data including whether or not we’ll issue [them] on the preprint server,” a Pfizer spokesperson said.

What do we know about the situation in the United States?

To date, U.S. public health authorities aren’t detecting the problem that the Israeli data seems to be flagging, said Jay Butler, the deputy director for infectious diseases at the CDC.

“We’re not seeing evidence at this point in time that waning immunity is occurring among people who were vaccinated back last December or January and that they are at higher risk of breakthrough infections,” Butler said Tuesday during a media briefing organized by the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Andrew Pavia, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Utah School of Medicine, said U.S. studies are underway looking for evidence of waning immunity. He cautioned that people need to wait for data to emerge.

“This is an area where everyone wants an answer before we have data. We really need to understand when we start seeing an increase in breakthroughs, an increase in serious breakthroughs, and which group that’s occurring in first before we decide to give boosters,” Pavia said.

Stone said the FDA and the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee are working on the issue and will determine “if and when and for whom booster doses would be indicated.”

Why is the Biden administration pushing back on the idea of boosters? 

Federal agencies rushed to dismiss Pfizer’s conclusions. In a rare joint statement last week, the FDA and the CDC emphasized that fully vaccinated Americans “do not need a booster shot at this time.” And during a briefing on Monday, Psaki also stressed that Pfizer’s surprise announcement might not have much bearing on U.S. vaccination policy — especially not immediately.

Still, the Biden administration isn’t pushing back on the idea of booster shots so much as it’s pushing back on Pfizer’s acting as a messenger of public health guidance. Psaki stressed Monday that the U.S. makes policy decisions after “holistically” examining data, not in response to a single company’s claims.

There might be a more pressing concern, too: vaccine hesitancy. Already, the Biden administration’s vaccination campaign has hit a wall, and any discussion that makes Americans more nervous about finally getting immunized would be poorly timed. Premature speculation about booster shots would fit the bill: Focus groups conducted by the pollster Frank Luntz have shown that some people are less likely to be vaccinated when they’re told they might need another shot months later.

Does this mean Pfizer and the Biden administration are fighting? 

Probably more about the way this information is coming out, not the process itself. On CNN, Fauci said that Albert Bourla, the CEO of Pfizer, had given him a call to apologize for not giving the government a heads-up. “We are on the same page,” Fauci said. He also called Bourla “a really great guy.”

Pfizer has been saying it expects boosters might be needed from the beginning. The strategy of using a third vaccine dose was announced by Pfizer and BioNTech in February. At that time, the company started the clinical trials referenced in its press release. Part of the reason could be that drug companies hope that there will be a booster market in the future. But they also are likely worried about what happens if boosters are needed and they didn’t develop them. It’s not surprising, given that Pfizer conducted trials of a booster, that the next step is to file that data with the FDA and to meet with the CDC.

Because of rules designed to make sure investors find out about important news, drug companies are used to flagging newsworthy clinical results in short press releases and revealing full data early. Here, that habit is rubbing public health experts and government experts the wrong way.

How much of this is being driven by concerns about the Delta variant?

There are two key scenarios that could determine whether and when people need Covid-19 vaccine boosters: one, if vaccine-generated immunity just generally wanes over time (which could happen in some groups, such as older adults, faster than others), or two, if a variant emerges that can “escape” that elicited immune response in ways that render the vaccines less effective. Companies have been preparing for the possibility of either scenario with two strategies: considering deploying another dose of their existing vaccines to boost immune system fighters and developing variant-specific boosters.

In its statement last week, Pfizer seemed to indicate both those scenarios could be at play, suggesting that its vaccine’s potency generally waned after six months or so, but also that the global rise of the Delta variant could be contributing to some loss of potency. While Pfizer said it was working on a Delta-specific booster, the company said it and its partner BioNTech believe that a third dose of its existing vaccine “has the potential to preserve the highest levels of protective efficacy against all currently known variants including Delta.”

Other studies, however, have indicated that full regimens of the vaccines (in the U.S., two doses of either the Pfizer or Moderna immunization, or the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine) retain their protective power against Delta, particularly when it comes to preventing the worst outcomes of a Covid-19 infection. In fact, Delta seems to have less ability to get around the body’s immune response than another variant, Beta (also known as B.1.351), though that variant is not as prevalent as Delta. Pfizer, in its statement about the possibility of boosters, also acknowledged this.

The hubbub about boosters gets at a bigger debate about what we expect from vaccines. Pfizer’s statement noted that while its vaccine may have lost a step in terms of preventing infection entirely or any symptomatic illness, it was still maintaining its ability to protect people from serious illness. So if waning immunity or the rise of variants leads to more infections — but they’re almost universally mild or moderate cases and aren’t driving waves of hospitalizations or deaths — does that justify giving people a booster to protect them from any infection? The question becomes more fraught when considering the global inequity in vaccine access.

If there are boosters, what does that mean for the businesses of Pfizer and other drug makers?

The U.S.’s big three makers of Covid-19 vaccines — Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson — have already made tens of billions of dollars during the pandemic, and the continued global demand for doses suggests they’ll make billions more. But the sustained profitability of those vaccines depends on wealthy nations deciding they need to buy third, fourth, and umpteenth doses to sustain immunity among their populations. Pfizer is leading the way in filing for authorization of a third dose, but J&J and Moderna, which is also developing a variant-specific booster, are likely to follow.

The debatable need for boosters is of particular importance to the makers of second-generation Covid-19 vaccines. Novavax, whose vaccine is yet to secure emergency authorization, is counting on a market for booster shots to make a return on its investment. Sanofi, whose GlaxoSmithKline-partnered vaccine ran into a delay last year, is in a similar position.

SVB Leerink analyst Geoffrey Porges expects Pfizer and Moderna to dominate the U.S. market for Covid-19 vaccines into 2023. But if boosters become a necessity, as Porges assumes they will, the market will become more fragmented, with space for a multitude of competitors to build sustainable businesses off of endemic Covid-19.

Should the U.S. and other wealthy countries really roll out booster shots when many people around the world haven’t yet had their first jab?

Vaccine inequity is a deeply troubling problem in this pandemic. Tedros, the WHO’s director-general, has repeatedly appealed to wealthy countries to find a solution — and castigated them for not moving quicker. If affluent countries begin to dole out third doses to large segments of their populations, the problem he has railed against will only worsen.

The Bloomberg vaccine tracker notes that of the 3.41 billion doses of vaccine that have been administered so far, 22% have been given in 27 countries that have only 10.4% of the global population. In a number of African countries, less than 1% of the populace has been vaccinated. And in a number of countries, health workers remain unvaccinated, Tedros said.

“We’re making conscious choices right now not to protect those most in need,” he said.

https://www.statnews.com/2021/07/12/when-and-how-will-we-know-covid-19-booster-shots/

J&J, AstraZeneca explore modifying Covid vaccines in response to rare blood clot issue

 Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca are conducting early stage research into whether potential modifications of their Covid-19 vaccines could reduce or eliminate the risk of rare, but serious, blood clots associated with the shots.

The blood clotting issue, which some scientists are calling vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia, or VITT, has been linked to both shots. Scientists have been discovering clues into how the clots form, boosting hopes of possibly reengineering the shots, a person familiar with the matter told CNBC.

The Wall Street Journal reported the news earlier Tuesday.

In a statement to CNBC, J&J said it supports “continued research and analysis as we work with medical experts and global health authorities.”

“Johnson & Johnson remains committed to helping end this deadly pandemic as quickly as possible, and we continue to believe in the positive benefit-risk profile of our vaccine,” the company said.

AstraZeneca said it is “actively working with the regulators and scientific community to understand these extremely rare blood-clotting events, including information to drive early diagnosis and intervention, and appropriate treatment.”

The Food and Drug Administration said in April it was adding a warning label to J&J’s Covid vaccine, citing the blood-clotting disorder as a rare side effect.

On Monday, the FDA said it was adding yet another warning to J&J’s label, noting the shot has been linked to a serious, but rare, autoimmune disorder known as Guillain-Barre syndrome.

About 100 preliminary reports of Guillain-Barre have been detected after 12.8 million doses of the J&J vaccine were administered, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The cases reported after receiving the J&J shot largely occurred about two weeks after vaccination and mostly in males, many aged 50 years and older, CDC data shows. The available data does not show a similar pattern with Pfizer’s or Moderna’s vaccine, the agency said.

The FDA and CDC on April 13 asked states to temporarily halt using J&J’s vaccine “out of an abundance of caution” while it investigated six women, ages 18 to 48, who developed cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, or CVST, in combination with low blood platelets within about two weeks of receiving the shot.

They recommended resuming use of the shot 10 days later after the CDC determined that the benefits of the inoculations outweighed their risks.

The Journal’s report Tuesday noted that modification of the vaccines might require changes to ownership rights or regulatory approvals.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/13/jj-astrazeneca-explore-modifying-covid-vaccines-in-response-to-rare-blood-clot-issue-report-says.html

ARCA bio Updates on Phase 2b Trial of Potential Treatment for COVID-19

  ARCA biopharma, Inc. (Nasdaq: ABIO), a biopharmaceutical company applying a precision medicine approach to developing genetically targeted therapies for cardiovascular diseases, today provided an update on ASPEN-COVID-19, the Phase 2b clinical trial evaluating rNAPc2 as a potential treatment for patients hospitalized with COVID-19.

ARCA has received approval from regulatory authorities in Argentina and Brazil to enroll patients in ASPEN-COVID-19. The trial is currently enrolling patients at seven investigative sites in the United States. The Company anticipates enrolling the first South American patients in July 2021.

Trial target enrollment is being increased from 100 to 160 patients in order to maximize the sample size for determining if there are differences in the two rNAPc2 dose regimens being investigated, to minimize variance in the standard of care heparin control arm, in recognition of the study now being conducted in different geographic regions and to account for evolving changes in the clinical course of COVID-19. To date, 77 patients have been enrolled in the trial. The Company also updated its guidance and now anticipates topline data from this international Phase 2b clinical trial in the fourth quarter of 2021.

“With the pandemic continuing to impact patients around the world and the emergence of multiple variants, there remains a critical need for safe, efficacious treatments for hospitalized COVID-19 patients,” said Dr. Michael Bristow, ARCA’s President and Chief Executive Officer, who is also an American Heart Association (AHA) funded COVID-19 investigator. “Many pathogenic viruses, including SARS-CoV-2, increase host cell expression of tissue factor, the primary initiator of the extrinsic coagulation pathway that also signals a parallel inflammatory response. rNAPc2 is a high affinity inhibitor of tissue factor, and with its combination of anticoagulant, anti-inflammatory and potential antiviral effects, we believe rNAPc2 may favorably impact clinical recovery of patients hospitalized with COVID-19, and thus has the potential to be a uniquely beneficial therapy for these patients, and possibly for other virus associated diseases. Argentina and Brazil are experiencing a higher COVID-19 case rate than the U.S. and, with their excellent investigators and track record in clinical trials, are logical countries in which to expand the Phase 2 trial and, ultimately, a potential Phase 3 trial.”

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has designated the investigation of rNAPc2 as a potential treatment for COVID-19 as a Fast Track development program. ARCA believes that rNAPc2 is the only anticoagulant class new chemical entity in development for COVID-19.

Ahead Of AdComm AstraZeneca, FibroGen's Roxadustat Hit With Safety, Efficacy Questions

 

  • Ahead of Thursday's meeting of the FDA's Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee, the agency is raising fresh doubts on the safety of AstraZeneca Plc's (NASDAQ: AZN) and FibroGen Inc's (NASDAQ: FGEN) anemia drug roxadustat.

  • FDA staffers flagged concerning evidence of blood clotting, when compared with placebo in nondialysis-dependent patients but also when compared against Amgen Inc (NASDAQ: AMGN) and Johnson & Johnson's (NYSE: JNJ) Epogen/Procrit, "which is itself known to pose these risks," in dialysis-dependent patients.

  • The staffers pooled their safety analysis from six Phase 3 trials in non-dialysis and dialysis-dependent patients.

  • On a composite of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), roxadustat was comparable to Epogen/Procrit in dialysis-dependent patients and comparable to placebo among non-dialysis patients.

  • The agency also noted "considerable disparity in subject retention between the roxadustat and placebo groups," challenging the interpretation of the company's safety analyses.

  • The committee on Thursday will be tasked with voting on two approval questions: whether roxadustat should be approved for the treatment of anemia due to CKD in adult patients on dialysis and whether it should be approved for those not on dialysis.

  • See the FDA Briefing Documents here.

What you need to know about the lambda Covid variant

 More than 18 months into the Covid-19 pandemic and the world is used to news of new variants of the virus by now, particularly those that have, one by one, supplanted previous versions of the disease.

Some mutations of the virus, like the alpha variant and the delta variant — discovered first in the U.K. and India, respectively — have been more transmissible than previous iterations of the virus and have gone on to dominate globally. Whenever a new variant of the coronavirus emerges, scientists watch it closely.

While the world is still contending with the rapid spread of the delta variant, which has usurped the alpha strain in terms of transmissibility and the potential to cause hospitalizations in unvaccinated people, there is now a new variant that experts are monitoring: The lambda variant.

Here’s what we know (and don’t know) about it:

What is the lambda variant?

The lambda variant, or “C.37” as the lineage has been designated, has been spreading rapidly in South America, particularly in Peru where the earliest documented samples of the virus date from August 2020.

However, it was only flagged up as a “variant of interest” by the World Health Organization on June 14 of this year as cases attributed to the variant had spread noticeably.

In its report in mid-June, the WHO reported that “lambda has been associated with substantive rates of community transmission in multiple countries, with rising prevalence over time concurrent with increased Covid-19 incidence” and that more investigations would be carried out into the variant.

Where is it exactly?

The WHO noted in its June 15 report that the lambda variant had been detected in 29 countries, territories or areas in five WHO regions, although it has a stronger presence in South America.

“Authorities in Peru reported that 81% of Covid-19 cases sequenced since April 2021 were associated with Lambda. Argentina reported increasing prevalence of Lambda since the third week of February 2021, and between 2 April and 19 May 2021, the variant accounted for 37% of the Covid-19 cases sequenced,” the WHO noted.

Meanwhile, in Chile, the prevalence of lambda has increased over time, accounting for 32% of sequenced cases reported in the last 60 days, the WHO said, adding that it was co-circulating at similar rates to the gamma variant but was “out-competing” the alpha variant in the same time period.

By June 24, the lambda variant had been detected in cases in 26 countries, according to Public Health England data. This included Chile, Argentina, Peru, Ecuador, Brazil and Colombia as well as the U.S., Canada, Germany, Spain, Israel, France, the U.K. and Zimbabwe, among others.

Is it more dangerous?

The WHO and other public health bodies are trying to understand how the variant compares with other strains of the virus, including whether it could be more transmissible and more resistant to vaccines.

In mid-June, the WHO said “lambda carries a number of mutations with suspected phenotypic implications, such as a potential increased transmissibility or possible increased resistance to neutralizing antibodies.”

Noting the specific mutations in the spike protein (some of which have been described as unusual by experts) the WHO said that: “There is currently limited evidence on the full extent of the impact associated with these genomic changes” and further studies are needed “to better understand the impact on countermeasures [against Covid-19] and to control the spread.”

It’s important to note that the lambda variant is still one step below being designated a “variant of concern” like the alpha or delta mutations. In a news conference last week, the WHO’s technical lead on Covid-19, Maria Van Kerkhove, was asked what would need to happen for it to change its definition of the lambda variant.

“It would become a variant of concern if it has demonstrated pathways of increased transmissibility, if it has increased severity for example or if it has some kind of impact on our countermeasures,” she said.

Do vaccines work against it?

Again, more studies are needed about the effect that the lambda variant has on vaccine efficacy, particularly on vaccines widely available in the West, such as those from Pfizer-BioNTechModerna or Oxford-AstraZeneca.

But questions have been raised in parts of South America over the effectiveness of Chinese vaccines, which have been those deployed predominantly in the region, as cases linked to the lambda variant spread and infection rates rise alongside vaccination programs. Brazil, Chile and Peru all rely heavily on Chinese Covid vaccines Sinovac or Sinopharm but vaccination rates differ wildly across South America.

One study that was carried out by the University of Chile in Santiago which looked at health-care workers who had received two doses of China’s CoronaVac (or Sinovac) vaccine suggested that the mutations present in the spike protein of the lambda variant “confer increased infectivity and immune escape from neutralizing antibodies.” The study, published on July 1, has not yet been peer-reviewed.

Chinese vaccines face rising doubts about their efficacy, compounded by a lack of data on their protection against the more transmissible delta variant. Weekly Covid cases, adjusted for population, have remained elevated in at least six of the world’s most inoculated countries — and five of those nations rely on vaccines from China.

No vaccine currently available is seen as 100% effective at preventing Covid -19 infection, although China’s vaccines have so far fared worse in clinical trials. Sinovac was seen as 50.4% effective in a Brazilian trial whose results were published in January. A study in the UAE published last December found the Sinopharm vaccine to be 86% effective.

China has defended its vaccines, however, and experts note that countries shouldn’t stop using Chinese Covid vaccines especially amid a lack of supply in low- and middle-income nations.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/09/covid-heres-what-you-need-to-know-the-lambda-variant.html

After vaccination burnout, Delta variant spurs countries to speed up shots

 he daily pace of COVID vaccinations has increased in about a dozen countries due to the arrival of the more contagious Delta variant and governments expanding their vaccination drives, a data analysis by Reuters found.

Israel's rate of vaccinations has seen a sharp pickup. The Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Spain are all vaccinating at their fastest speed to date. Belgium, Denmark, Finland and Sweden are not far behind.

But it is a different story in the United States. At its current, declining pace, 70% of the U.S. population will not receive a first dose of vaccine until Dec. 1, according to the Reuters analysis of Our World in Data vaccination figures https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations.

At the current pace, Canada, Chile, the United Kingdom, and eight others will reach that benchmark before the end of the month. And if the current pace is maintained, five more countries will hit 70% by the end of August. Those dates could change depending on many factors, including approvals to vaccinate younger children. (Graphic on vaccinations) https://tmsnrt.rs/2TbE5vy

VACCINATION BURNOUT?

In Israel the vaccination rate had plateaued in April as new COVID infections were on a months-long steady decline. But when the arrival of Delta brought a spike of cases in June, the government jumped in quickly with a new campaign urging teenagers to get the shot and parents to vaccinate their children aged 12 to 15.

In many countries, vaccination drives slowed before reaching 70% or more of the population - a threshold some experts say could help largely curb COVID-19 transmission through so-called herd immunity, when combined with people who developed immunity following an infection. (Graphic on global vaccinations) https://tmsnrt.rs/3tUM8ta

The ability of the coronavirus to mutate quickly into new variants, such as Delta, that reduce the effectiveness of vaccines has cast doubt on whether herd immunity can be achieved. However, various governments have still set national vaccination goals close to that number to encourage citizens to get inoculated. The European Union, for instance, has distributed enough vaccines for 70% of its population.

In some places, regulators have just recently authorized use of the shots in 12 to 15 year olds; in others, supply is catching up with demand.

Many of those countries had initially focused on giving shots to older populations and other high-risk groups. The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine has been authorized by the U.S. and European Union for people aged 12 and over, but others such as AstraZeneca are only available to adults.

With the spread of the Delta variant, countries are trying to reignite their campaigns by overcoming skepticism about the vaccine and misconceptions that the young do not need a shot.

Heidi Larson, director of the international Vaccine Confidence Project and a professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said a rise in vaccinations due to Delta variant concerns may have been held back by changes seen as signalling an end to the pandemic, such as lifting mask mandates and travel bans.

"We're giving a lot of mixed messages right now," Larson said. Israel is an exception, she said. It has reimposed measures such as requiring mask use indoors.

While a decline in vaccination rates is to be expected, it has created pockets where groups including children, the elderly and homeless remain at risk, experts say.

"A deceleration of vaccination in itself is a logical phenomenon," said Vincent Marechal, a senior virologist with France's Sorbonne University. But slowing down too early opens the door to the virus spreading - mostly among children - and evolving to become more dangerous for them.

THE YOUNG DRIVE GAINS

Portugal, where the Delta variant accounts for more than 90% of cases, has the highest number of new cases in the European Unions since mid-June. It has also doubled its pace of vaccinations from a low of around 60,000 inoculations per day, in part by including 18 to 29 year olds. (Graphic on global cases) https://tmsnrt.rs/34pvUyi

In Singapore, the rate of vaccinations has recently gone up after opening its vaccination program to people aged 12 to 39 years old. It also hastened the delivery of vaccine supplies to help it accelerate the rollout.

In Britain, where 87% of adults have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, the government stepped up its target to have all adults vaccinated by July 19, when its COVID restrictions are slated to be lifted. It has begun giving second shots sooner as well to fight the Delta variant.

NO MAGICAL SOLUTION

In France, where 53.3% of the adult population has received one dose of a vaccine and 41.3% two doses or a single-dose shot, authorities are ramping up outreach to those who have not made vaccination appointments.

"We are indeed hitting a glass ceiling and trying to come up every day with ideas, and the good news is we are seeing a very recent pick up in bookings," a source close to the health ministry said last week.

The source added the government was still hoping to see 40 million of adults receive a first dose by the end of August versus 35.9 million as of July 12.

France is about to open temporary vaccination centres at cultural venues across the country such as in Avignon, home to a world-famous theatre festival, and vaccination buses will tour the Bordeaux wine region of Gironde to catch seasonal workers.

COVID-19 jabs will be mandatory for France's health workers and anyone wanting to get into a cinema or board a train will soon need to show proof of vaccination or a negative test under new rules announced by President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.

In the United States, where young people have been eligible since April, vaccinations are stagnant. The Biden administration missed its goal of 70% of adults having had at least one COVID-19 shot by July 4 and has struggled to reach 50% fully vaccinated even as it has warned of outbreaks due to the Delta variant.

Younger people have lagged older ones in seeking vaccines while shots among Black and Hispanic Americans have trailed those of Asian and white Americans, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"Whether governments throw in incentives or coercive measures, there is no magical solution," said Martin Blachier, an epidemiologist with Paris-based healthcare data analysis firm Public Health Expertise. "Some will just not get the vaccine."

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ASTRAZENECA-PLC-4000930/news/After-vaccination-burnout-Delta-variant-spurs-countries-to-speed-up-shots-35844408/