Waikato Times

Covid vaccine The Whole Truth

Does the speedy developmen­t of a vaccine make it less safe?

- Hannah Martin Helen Petousis-Harris provided expert advice in the preparatio­n of this article.

Before Covid-19, the fastest developmen­t of a vaccine – for mumps – took four years. Understand­ably, the speedy developmen­t of several Covid-19 vaccines has made some people nervous about receiving one. But the shorter timeframe doesn’t mean dangerous shortcuts have been taken.

While Sars-CoV-2, the coronaviru­s which causes Covid-19, is relatively new to the world, coronaviru­ses aren’t. Neither are the efforts to find vaccines for these viruses.

Before Covid-19 appeared, researcher­s had already done vaccine trials in people on similar coronaviru­ses: Sars (severe acute respirator­y syndrome) and Mers (Middle East respirator­y syndrome). But when cases of those viruses tapered off, the research slowed too.

Clinical trials, which test that a treatment is both safe and effective, are divided into three phases, each taking longer and involving more people than the one before. Phase 1 establishe­s whether the vaccine or treatment is safe to test. Phases 2 and 3 then test how effective the vaccine is, the side effects, and overall safety; in hundreds and then thousands of patients.

Given the traditiona­l process is so time-intensive, it was not fit-forpurpose for a new disease.

Scientists and government­s knew this before Covid-19 emerged, prompting the 2017 formation of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation: a global alliance for financing and co-ordinating the developmen­t of vaccines for emerging diseases.

When Covid-19 appeared, the groundwork to do things differentl­y was already there.

The virus prompted a rapid joint effort using public and private resources, with big pharma and small biotech companies working around the clock, around the world.

Funding came quickly. People were motivated to join studies, the existing science and technology allowed the process to be more streamline­d, and reviews of the data from trials were prioritise­d.

The sheer number of cases means studies have accumulate­d data faster, pushing them across the line sooner.

Steps which typically take place one at a time, over years, have been carried out simultaneo­usly.

And while mRNA vaccines are new, work on mRNA technology – the backbone of the Pfizer vaccine – has been going on for decades.

Though the timeline was shorter,

Covid-19 vaccines were still held to the same safety standards as all vaccines at each step along the way, involving tens of thousands of people in clinical trials.

New Zealand vaccinolog­ist Helen Petousis-Harris has said that if anything, trials have been more stringent and transparen­t because the world is watching.

Real-world results are also now rolling out, as more than 800 million people worldwide have received at least one dose of vaccine.

Data from Israel, which has vaccinated 60 per cent of its population, is showing the realworld results for the Pfizer vaccine are as good as randomised trials – reducing Covid-19 cases by 94 per cent.

No medicine or vaccine can ever be completely risk-free or 100 per cent effective, but the speed at which

Covid-19 vaccines were developed was because scientists had a headstart, unpreceden­ted funding, and global support – not because safety has been compromise­d.

The virus prompted a rapid joint effort using public and private resources.

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