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regular-article-logo Friday, 15 November 2024

Serum Institute chairman not in favour of mixing vaccines

Efficacy of this approach has not been proven in field trials involving thousands of participants, says Cyrus Poonawalla

Our Bureau, PTI Pune Published 13.08.21, 06:36 PM
A recent ICMR study has found that a cocktail of Covishield and Covaxin could generate better immunity.

A recent ICMR study has found that a cocktail of Covishield and Covaxin could generate better immunity. File picture

Serum Institute of India (SII) chairman Dr Cyrus Poonawalla on Friday said he was not in favour of administering two different coronavirus vaccines for better efficacy.

Poonawalla, whose firm makes the Covishield vaccine, was speaking to reporters after receiving the Lokmanya Tilak National Award in Pune.

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"I am against the mixing of two different vaccines. There is no need to mix two different vaccines," he said, when asked about a recent ICMR study that a cocktail of Covishield and Covaxin could generate better immunity.

"If cocktail vaccines are administered and if the result is not good, then SII may say that another vaccine was not good, vice versa, the other company might say that since you mixed Serum's vaccine, it did not give desired results," Poonawalla said.

The efficacy of this approach has not been proven in field trials involving thousands of participants, he added.

A study by the Indian Council of Medical Research involving 98 people, 18 of whom had inadvertently received Covishield as first dose and Covaxin as the second in Uttar Pradesh, showed that combining vaccines elicited better immunogenicity.

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