LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) - One dose of either
Pfizer-BioNTech's or AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine
helps to prevent disease severe enough to require
hospitalisation of people in their 80s with other illnesses,
interim data from a UK study showed on Wednesday.
The findings, from an ongoing surveillance project funded by
Pfizer and known as AvonCAP, found that one dose of the
Pfizer-BioNTech shot, which began to be used in Britain on Dec.
8, 2020, was 71.4% effective from 14 days at preventing
symptomatic illness severe enough to result in hospitalisation
among patients with a median age of 87 years.
For the AstraZeneca vaccine, which began to be rolled out in
Britain on Jan. 4, the results showed it was 80.4% effective by
the same measures among patients with an average age of 88.
"These early results show the UK COVID-19 vaccine programme
is working better than we could have hoped," said Adam Finn, a
professor of paediatrics and chief investigator of the AvonCAP
study at Britain's University of Bristol.
He said the findings showed how the vaccines can reduce the
burden of serious COVID-19 in elderly, high-risk populations,
and relieve pressure on health services.
The results add to other early findings from studies of
vaccine roll-outs in Israel, Scotland and England, which have
also pointed to high effectiveness from the first doses.
A UK study among healthcare staff found last week that a
single dose of Pfizer' vaccine cut the number of asymptomatic
infections by about 75%, which would significantly reduce the
risk of transmission of the virus.
A study in Israel, which last week confirmed an efficacy of
well over 90% for Pfizer's two-shot vaccine, also showed a
single shot was 57% effective in protecting against symptomatic
infections after two weeks.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Jane Merriman)