French healthcare company Sanofi S.A. (Euronext Paris:SAN) (Nasdaq:SNY) announced on Saturday that its protein-based COVID-19 vaccine, Nuvaxovid (NVX-CoV2705), showed statistically significant lower systemic reactogenicity compared to mNEXSPIKE (mRNA-1283), Moderna's (NASDAQ:MRNA) mRNA-based vaccine, in a head-to-head phase 4 study.
The randomised, double-blind trial enrolled 1,000 adults in the United States and was presented at the ESCMID Global Congress in Munich. The study met its primary endpoint, with 91.6% of mNEXSPIKE recipients experiencing at least one systemic reaction within seven days compared to 83.6% of Nuvaxovid recipients.
Across secondary measures, Nuvaxovid demonstrated reduced severity and duration of side effects. Moderate-to-severe systemic symptoms were reported in 43.1% of Nuvaxovid recipients compared to 61.3% for mNEXSPIKE, while moderate-to-severe local reactions occurred in 38.7% versus 58.7%, respectively. Severe systemic symptoms were more than 50% less frequent with Nuvaxovid, and severe local reactions were over 75% less frequent. Patient-reported outcomes indicated less disruption to daily activities and higher willingness to receive the same vaccine again.
The findings address ongoing challenges in COVID-19 vaccination uptake, where concerns over side effects remain a key barrier despite continued global hospitalisations and seasonal healthcare strain.
Pfizer and Valneva report strong Phase 3 results for Lyme disease vaccine candidate
Mabtech partners with Sai Life Sciences to expand access to EYRA multiplex immunology platform
Elaris FlexCo signs global licence agreement with Valneva
Sino Biological launches 2026-2027 Northern Hemisphere influenza vaccine strain antigens
Centivax Inc doses first healthy volunteers in Centi-Flu 01 Phase 1A clinical trial
Delonix Bioworks gets IND clearance for DX-104 in China
Valneva and Instituto Butantan launch pilot chikungunya vaccination campaign in Brazil
European Commission approves GSK's Arexvy for adults aged 18 and over