KEY POINTS
  • The variant, known as B.1.1.7., has an unusually high number of mutations and is associated with more efficient and rapid transmission.
  • It had led to concerns about the effectiveness of Covid vaccines against it.
  • Authors of the study warned the rapid spread of mutations worldwide required "continuous monitoring of the significance of changes for maintained protection by currently authorized vaccines."
A picture taken on January 15, 2021, shows a pharmacist holding with gloved hands a phial of the undiluted Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for Covid-19, stored at -70 ° in a super freezer of the hospital of Le Mans, northwestern France as the country carry on a vaccination campaign to fight against the spread of the novel coronavirus.

LONDON — The coronavirus vaccine developed by Pfizer-BioNTech is likely to be just as effective against a highly transmissible mutant strain of the virus that was discovered in the U.K., according to a study by the two companies.

The variant, known as B.1.1.7., was estimated to have first emerged in the U.K. in September. It has an unusually high number of mutations and is associated with more efficient and rapid transmission.