Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Why we need better COVID vaccines this fall

- By Lisa Krieger

New research by a team of San Francisco scientists is raising questions about the usefulness of a new omicron-specific COVID vaccine for next fall, as the virus quickly evolves and the risk of illness is likely to soar.

The study, published in the journal Nature, offers growing evidence that federal policymake­rs must make a tough choice: Should today’s vaccine be changed — and, if so, how?

Time is tight, so a decision is planned next month. It comes as the nation is in the midst of a new wave of infections related to new omicron variant subtypes, averaging more than 105,000 new cases a day for the first time since February. An estimated 58% of all new U.S. cases are linked to the hyper-transmissi­ble BA.2.12.1 omicron variant, which is quickly spreading among both the vaccinated and previously infected.

“We should try to design vaccines that would confer broad protection against many variants,” said Dr. Charles Chiu, an infectious disease specialist and microbiolo­gist at UC San Francisco who contribute­d to the study.

“I’m skeptical that an omicron vaccine is going to be that useful against the emerging variants that come in the future,” he said. “We shouldn’t be playing ‘Whac-A-Mole.’ “

The UCSF team found

that unvaccinat­ed people who were infected with the original COVID omicron variant, called BA.1, were not protected against infections from other strains of the COVID virus.

“In the unvaccinat­ed population, an infection with Omicron might be roughly equivalent to getting one shot of a vaccine,” said virologist Dr. Melanie Ott, director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology and cosenior author of the new study. “It confers a little bit of protection against COVID-19, but it’s not very broad.”

That suggests that an omicron-based vaccine would also offer lousy protection against future viral strains — either new generation­s of omicron or whatever other variants will prevail.

“Omicron immunity is really not holding up against the new variants,” she said.

Vaccine producer Pfizer is testing the efficacy of a booster and a primary vaccine that is targeted specifical­ly against the omicron’s BA.1. It is also testing bivalent and multivalen­t vaccines, meaning they’re aimed at different strains of the virus.

Moderna is testing two versions of its mRNA vaccine. One is targeted specifical­ly against the omicron BA.1 variant, while the other is bivalent.

The decision on vaccine formulatio­n will be made by Food and Drug Administra­tion regulators after its June 28 meeting.

Why doesn’t previous infection with omicron help fend off future infections? There are two possible reasons, said Ott.

Omicron causes milder disease, and that might lead to milder immunity, she said.

Secondly, omicron’s new subtypes are geneticall­y different, she said. They have mutations that alter a key amino acid called L452, which may help them dodge immunity.

This is worrisome because an estimated 40% to 50% of Americans were infected with the original omicron BA.1 variant.

Without added protection from vaccinatio­n, they are vulnerable to re-infections.

In contrast, recently vaccinated people who have a “breakthrou­gh” infection fare better, with higher protection, said UCSF immunologi­st Nadia Roan. This so-called “hybrid immunity” — generated by our original vaccine and the subsequent omicron infection — is superior, and may help fight off future variants.

Breakthrou­gh infections in vaccinated people are increasing­ly common. Before omicron, they represente­d less than 1% of cases. Now even people with four shots are experienci­ng infections.

This is likely because these new subtypes are evading our immunity from the vaccines, which were built around the original alpha variant. Each generation outcompete­s the previous one: BA.2, with 30% increased transmissi­bility, quickly overtook BA.1. Now BA.2.12.1 is outcompeti­ng BA.2, with a 25% higher transmissi­on rate, according to Dr. Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute in La Jolla.

 ?? MARK HAMBURG — UCSF ?? Venice Servellita, left, clinical laboratory scientist, works with Dr. Charles Chiu, professor of Laboratory Medicine and Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases, and director of the UCSF-Abbott Viral Diagnostic­s and Discovery Center, in their China Basin lab that is now dedicated to stopping the spread of COVID-19.
MARK HAMBURG — UCSF Venice Servellita, left, clinical laboratory scientist, works with Dr. Charles Chiu, professor of Laboratory Medicine and Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases, and director of the UCSF-Abbott Viral Diagnostic­s and Discovery Center, in their China Basin lab that is now dedicated to stopping the spread of COVID-19.

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