Moderna chief executive officer Stephane Bancel has said he feels it’s “a reasonable scenario” to assume that the last stages of the COVID-19 pandemic are in sight.
“I think that is a reasonable scenario,” Bancel said. “There’s an 80 percent chance that as Omicron evolves or SarsCov-2 virus evolves, we are going to see less and less virulent viruses.”
“We still need, especially for the older ones, I think people above 50 to be vaccinated, people at high risk ... will need to be boosted once a year.”
He also said there’s another “20 percent scenario where we see a next mutation, which is more virulent than Omicron.”
“I think we got lucky as a world that Omicron was not very virulent, but still are—we see thousands of people dying every day around the planet because of Omicron,” he said.
However, he added, “this virus is not going away, as we’ve been saying since almost the beginning—this virus is going to stay with humans forever, like flu and we’d have to live with it.”
He credited the tapering to global immunity and increased vaccinations, among other things.
“So we anticipate that there will be a quiet period before COVID-19 may come back towards the end of the year, but not necessarily the pandemic coming back,” he said.
However, Kluge said European nations need to continue with their vaccination and boosting campaigns to preserve immunity and to maintain surveillance of strains to detect new variants of COVID-19.
If a pattern of peak cases followed by a downwards trend in cases continues, he said, the United States will start to see a similar “turnaround throughout the entire country.”
President Joe Biden on Feb. 11 said that the decision by a number of states to lift masking mandates is “probably premature” but noted that it’s a “tough call.”
The company said it will open new subsidiaries in Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong as it continues to scale up the manufacturing and distribution of its COVID-19 vaccine and future mRNA vaccines and therapeutics.