A leading French vaccine scientists, Cecil Czerkinsky, has said he is convinced by the findings of an Italian-Russian study that showed Sputnik Light, a one-shot version of the Sputnik V Coved-19 jab, provided significantly increased protection against the Omicron variant when used as a booster.
The paper, prepared by Italy’s Lazzaro Spallanzani National Institute for Infectious Diseases and Moscow’s Gamaleya National Center of Epidemiology and Microbiology, which created the jab, has also revealed the Russian vaccine is 2.6 times more effective against Omicron than the Pfizer shot.
“Booster vaccination with mix & match vaccines, including Sputnik Light, is efficient against mutations,” Czerkinsky said, as cited by Sputnik V’s account on Twitter.
The scientist currently works as the research director at the Institute of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology (IMCP), based in the Sophia-Antipolis Science Park on the French Riviera. Local media often quotes Czerkinsky as an expert on the issues of jabs and vaccination.
The study, which came out in preprint version last week, “convincingly shows that adenovirus vectored Sputnik is capable of enhancing neutralizing antibody responses not only to Delta but also to Omicron when used as stand-alone homologous vaccine booster and as booster in combination with an mRNA vaccine,” he pointed out.
The Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 jabs use mRNA technology and are among the most widely used in the West.
Russia is offering its Sputnik Light as a universal booster to many other foreign vaccines to strengthen and lengthen the immune response to Omicron, Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which financed the jab’s development and oversees its distribution, told RT last week.