Saturday, June 27, 2020

Why vaccines are important? And especially for COVID-19!

I would prefer to be writing about the fantastic ways to improve and boost your immune system backed up by scientific evidence, but I can’t because I feel the duty to explain the importance of “vaccines education”. 

First, let me clarify that there are a lot of different types of vaccines and you CAN NOT put them all in the same bag! I will explain 5 of the most promising SARS-COVID-2 vaccines further below. 

Second, a bit of a history lesson: we should be grateful for the existence of vaccines that have helped prevent the spread of terrible diseases, such as tuberculosis and polio. Both brought huge suffering in multiple countries around the world and were controlled thanks to the implementation of vaccines! 

Third, look at the current situation when people refuse to vaccinate: we have an outbreak that puts others in danger. “Why?”, you ask. Because viruses need a host or reservoir to continue existing and non-vaccinated people can be that reservoir. Therefore, don’t do to others what you don’t want done to you: to infect you with a disease!

Currently, more than 125 vaccines for COVID-19 are in pre-clinical development, which means that they are being tested in non-human subjects (cells, mice, rats, ferrets, rhesus macaques, etc). 10 vaccines are being tested in humans for safety and dosages (this means in healthy subjects), 8 vaccines are in phase II, which involves testing the safety in expanded studies. Only 3 vaccines are starting phase III, meaning large scale efficacy tests. In this phase, the vaccine is tested in thousands of people separating the volunteers in 2 groups: one will receive the actual vaccine and the other - the placebo one to determine if the vaccine protects against the coronavirus. The last step can be a phase IV trial with an even bigger and diverse group of volunteers and a review of the results by the local regulatory entity which will evaluate if the vaccine is approved or not for use in that region. Notice that each country has its own regulatory organization and some medicines are approved for use in the USA but not in Europe.

Types of vaccines:

Attenuated or inactivated virus vaccine

These vaccines use a weakened or inactivated version of the coronavirus to trigger an immune response. The Chinese companies “Sinopharm” and “Sinovac” are starting to test their attenuated and inactivated vaccines for phase III internationally.  “CoronaVac”, the Sinovac’ vaccine, has shown promising results in Phase I/II of the trials: 743 volunteers reported no severe adverse effects and produced an immune response. Sinovac is building a facility to manufacture up to 100 million doses annually.

Attenuated bacteria vaccine

This vaccine contains live bacteria that have been weakened or attenuated. One such vaccine is the Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine which was developed in the early 1900s as a protection against tuberculosis.

After a study reported a relationship between Covid-19 outcomes and the BCG vaccination status, a Research Institute in Australia started conducting a Phase III trial, and several other trials are underway to understand if this vaccine partly protects against the coronavirus.

Viral Vector Vaccines

These vaccines use a different type of virus that wouldn’t affect humans in a negative way (called a vector) to deliver coronavirus genes into cells and trigger an immune response.

The British-Swedish company “AstraZeneca” and the University of Oxford are working on a viral vector vaccine using a chimpanzee adenovirus that will expose the coronavirus’ S protein on its surface in order to trigger an immune system response in the people that will be vaccinated. The vaccine is in Phase II/III trial in the UK and Phase III trials in Brazil and South Africa, and it might be ready by 2021. “AstraZeneca” claimed their total manufacturing capacity stands at two billion doses.

Vaccines with viral genomic material

These vaccines use one or more of the coronavirus’ own genes to trigger an immune response. USA based company “Moderna” uses the viral messenger RNA to produce only the viral proteins in the cells that will trigger an immune response. The company tested this vaccine in 8 volunteers with positive results, and they are moving to phase III in July. The trial was dosing volunteers in Phase I with 3 different amounts of mRNA species, and after testing the immunogenicity (whether or not these doses produce antibodies) they reported that by day 15 after the first injection, the volunteers generated antibodies.

The German company “BioNTech” is collaborating with “Pfizer” and “Fosun Pharma” to develop their mRNA vaccine. They started the Phase I trial in May, “Pfizer” hopes to have a few million doses for emergency use in 2021 if all goes well in the trials.

Another interesting one, the Imperial College London is collaborating with “Morningside Ventures” to develop a “self-amplifying” RNA vaccine, which boosts the production of a viral protein that stimulates the immune system, and they began Phase I/II trials in June.

 

Protein-Based Vaccines

These vaccines use a coronavirus protein or a protein fragment to trigger an immune response.

One such vaccine is worked on by the USA company “Novavax” which started a Phase I/II trial on a vaccine made up of particles carrying fragments of coronavirus proteins.

 

The list goes on and I encourage you to check on the links below and learn more about the different vaccines and the research behind them. Be aware of your own cognitive bias, for example, stop citing the inexistent connection between autism and vaccines, that research has now been thoroughly debunked, the Lancet journal issued a retraction on Wakefield’s paper, and he lost his medical licence.

Let me leave you with this great advice from the WHO about how to respond to vaccine deniers:

“Vaccine-preventable diseases can be very severe, and still cause millions of deaths per year around the world. Even with the best available care in the world, vaccine-preventable diseases can cause permanent disability and even death. Prevention is by far the best intervention.”

 “There are no equally safe and effective alternatives to vaccinations.”

 “The scientific evidence is clear: vaccination is the most effective health intervention for prevention of many serious diseases.”

 “We as an institution/agency are aiming to sustain the health of every individual member of the public. We are sorry that you have lost trust in our effort, but we hope to regain it.”

 “The scientific evidence is clear; vaccination is a safe way to prevent many serious diseases. Any theoretical risk to the individual and society is far outweighed by the risks to one and all of not doing so.“

 

References:

https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/draft-landscape-of-covid-19-candidate-vaccines

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/science/coronavirus-vaccine-tracker.html

https://www.statnews.com/2020/03/11/researchers-rush-to-start-moderna-coronavirus-vaccine-trial-without-usual-animal-testing/

https://www.raps.org/news-and-articles/news-articles/2020/3/covid-19-vaccine-tracker

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dYWZMx-Lfs

https://www.who.int/immunization/sage/meetings/2016/october/8_Best-practice-guidance-respond-vocal-vaccine-deniers-public.pdf