"Even if the antibodies are reduced, there is no effect on efficacy because they still are enough antibodies." Unfortunately, this is speculation. And, to be honest, a strawman using the co-author's media statement. Unlike you, I don't care much about his media statements. I read what his team wrote in the journal. The conclusion that they reached was that "
neutralization of the B.1.351-spike virus was weaker by approximately two thirds". That study made no reference to the requisite levels of antibodies needed or reached in the body.
The 95% number is the published efficacy against the wild version. If a variant is influencing the efficacy, that's the only benchmark that will matter. Calling it a 'goalpost move' isn't going to alter how we benchmark this efficacy.
The lower efficacy is how Pfizer views it.
So, you need to read that article more closely. The study was jointly conducted by Pfizer and the UTMB researchers. There are two parties to that study. What you are quoting is the UTMB researcher's media statement. What I highlighted in my initial post was the statement Pfizer made. Both of these are opinions at this point. (The only facts are what I quoted from NEJM, that show a 67% poorer neutralization against the new variant.)
And this is the same issue with Moderna's study. Just that you are bringing in CNN's opinion this time. What the actual study says instead is pretty objective:
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2102179
Now, there are no brownie points for claiming 'we don't know'. (My outsized investment portfolio isn't where it is today for predicting the past.) Rather than the lazy approach - if I "don't know" - I research..
Here is what we do know:
- Both Pfizer and Moderna have publicly stated that they are working on or want to work on the boosters.
- Both their vaccines produce significantly less antibodies against the South African variant.
- AZ's vaccine has been shelved against the South African variant, while J&J's is less than 60% effective.
- Fauci and other experts agree that the vaccines will need tweaking against the new variants.
Versus the speculation:
- We don't know, but the reduced antibodies may still be enough to "protect" against the variant.
- We don't know, as we don't have any idea of the effect on efficacy yet
- We don’t know what the minimum neutralizing number is.
- etc.
Look at these two sets of arguments. Look at these objectively. Do you really think that claiming "we don't know" will change the trajectory of what we will know, say, a month or two from today? That the vaccines are less effective against the newer variants? That their revised efficacy will be low enough to warrant boosters next year?