Both will be available; that's right.
On this issue of the mutations, as you know, seasonal flu is mutating all the time. This particular virus is fairly stable, strangely enough. It hasn't mutated very much. As I mentioned earlier on, changes have now been detected in the Netherlands, but they haven't affected what is called the antigenicity of the virus. That means when you have a vaccine for a seasonal flu, it recognizes a particular virus, and if a small change comes along, then it doesn't match very well. You're doing a best-case scenario to match. And every year the World Health Organization has a meeting in February and they do a little bit of crystal ball gazing. I used to be part of the group that is involved there. They look at the serology—that is, what antibodies are circulating in people's blood. They look also at what viruses are circulating and whether they are changing, and they try to match them up. And if they see the virus moving ahead and they don't match very well, then they say, well, this virus is going to be circulating in the next season. And it has worked quite well. So they make a recommendation of what the new vaccine should be.
This means a lot of work, basically. And it looks as if these small changes do weaken the.... If you've been immunized and there's a changed virus, then your resistance is not as good as it was for the original virus.
With these adjuvants present, it's been shown at least in the H5N1 data.... This is where we do our work, on this prototype, if I can put it that way, because the H1 hasn't changed yet. It did seem that the immune response that came from the adjuvanted vaccine did cross-react. It's called cross-reaction. It recognizes these changed types, essentially, so it would give you protection against these other varieties as well.
So during the season as this pandemic progresses, you would not have to change your vaccine, essentially. That's the idea. Otherwise, by the second wave and by the time you get to the third wave, you might have to change. We don't know that with the H1, but that's the prediction, that it would be giving you a broader cross-protection, as they call it. There's some evidence of that coming from the mock, which we did all our work on originally.
Does that help?