Moderna CEO says COVID-19 vaccine likely to protect for 'couple years'

Research into how long protection may last is ongoing

Moderna’s CEO made a bold prediction Thursday about the amount of immunity his company’s COVID-19 vaccine may provide, suggesting that the recently approved vaccine could offer protection of up to a couple of years.

"The nightmare scenario that was described in the media in the spring with a vaccine only working a month or two is, I think, out of the window," Stephane Bancel, Moderna CEO, said during an Oddo BHF event, according to Reuters.

"The antibody decay generated by the vaccine in humans goes down very slowly," he said. "We believe there will be protection potentially for a couple of years."  

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He also said that the company has received orders for 500 million doses of the vaccine from countries all over the world. Moderna is currently approved in the U.S., U.K., and as of Wednesday the European Union. Late-stage clinical trial data showed the vaccine to be 94.1% effective at preventing COVID-19 disease among participants.

Moderna's vaccine is given in two doses spaced 28 days apart. ((AP Photo/Charlie Riedel))

Lasting immunity has been a question mark for the COVID-19 vaccines that were developed in less than one year’s time. Research into how long the vaccines may last is ongoing, but it is too early to definitively determine. It’s also too soon to know what impact the vaccines will have on transmission.

Earlier this week several federal officials floated plans to issue half-doses of the vaccine in an effort to speed up inoculation efforts and extend the supply, but the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said the move would be a "significant public health risk," and lacks proper data.

Dr. Moncef Slaoui, chief medical adviser for Operation Warp Speed, predicted last month that the vaccines may offer protection for up to three years.

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"My expectation is that prevention of disease by these vaccines will last quite long, maybe prevention of infection to the level we're seeing, maybe shorter-lasting, maybe lasts three, four, six months," Slaoui previously said on "Andrea Mitchell Reports." "When prevention of disease, in my humble opinion as an expert, is probably going to last a year or two years, three years."

Fox News' Kayla Rivas contributed to this report.

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