USA TODAY International Edition

COVID- 19 vaccine success in tests heralds ‘ new era’

Researcher­s achieve decade’s worth of progress in a single year, professor says

- Karen Weintraub

The success of two COVID- 19 candidate vaccines marks a turning point in the long history of vaccines and could lead to major advances against a variety of diseases.

Vaccines developed by Pfizer/ BioNTech and Moderna are more than 95% effective against COVID- 19, trials show. Both depend on a technology never before used in a commercial vaccine that could upend the way future ones are made.

This new messenger RNA technology, as well another method that depends on viruses to deliver vaccines, are transformi­ng the field, said Brendan Wren, a professor of vaccinolog­y at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

“It could be quite a new era for vaccines and vaccinolog­y,” he said. “We seemed to move ahead in this one year 10 years.”

These technologi­es had advanced enough that they were ready – in time for this year’s burst of COVID- 19- related funding and attention – to be proved in human trials.

It’s a silver lining of sorts to the pandemic. Without the urgency to find a solution to COVID- 19, the money and the collaborat­ion between government, academia and industry required for the breakthrou­gh might not have come together for years, if ever.

“COVID is what made RNA jump to the head of the pack,” said Drew Weissman, a professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine.

Though messenger RNA technology hasn’t grabbed headlines before now, a handful of researcher­s, including Weissman, have been working on it for decades.

“Actually, it feels like my entire life,” said Weissman, who helped launch and lead the field since the 1980s.

Messenger RNAs are part of the body’s toolkit – used to turn a DNA blueprint into the proteins needed for every cellular activity. Weissman and other researcher­s tried for years to get the technology to work, but every time they injected an experiment­al mRNA vaccine into an animal, it triggered dangerous inflammation.

However, advances in the science – some credited to Weissman and his academic colleagues, others to government scientists or those in private industry – have finally brought mRNA vaccines to the finish line.

The success serves as a reminder of the importance of basic science, said Dr. Barney Graham, a government researcher whose office has been collaborat­ing with Moderna for nearly four years to advance their mRNA vaccine technology.

“Investment in basic science only helps,” Graham said. “Even if it looks like some arcane idea that doesn’t make sense, that kind of knowledge and basic understand­ing of biology and how things work are really informativ­e to this kind of program.”

Pfizer’s completed trial of 44,000 people and Moderna’s nearly finished trial of 30,000 found the approach to be safe, causing no major health issues, and effective, protecting more than 95% of those vaccinated.

“All the boxes have now been checked. The platform clearly works,” Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a news conference announcing Moderna’s effectiveness results.

“Our aspiration­s have been met, and that’s really very good news,” Fauci said. “Help is on the way.”

How mRNA vaccines work

Advocates say messenger RNA vaccines have several advantages over traditiona­l technologi­es.

They aren’t grown in eggs or cells and don’t have to go through the arduous purification of most vaccines, said Graham, deputy director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

“The more you can simplify things and just use exactly what you need and not anything more, overall it makes products safer and more likely to work,” he said.

The mRNA vaccines can be developed quickly.

Moderna was ready to test its mRNA- 1273 candidate vaccine in people about two months after receiving the genetic code of the virus from Chinese scientists.

In clinical trials, the mRNA vaccines caused temporary side effects in 80%90% of trial participan­ts, but they were mild: Most had sore arms or felt cruddy for a day or two. No one fell seriously ill. That could change when vaccines are given to billions of people, but early results suggest bad reactions will be rare.

Messenger RNA vaccines contain only a fraction of the virus, so unlike some vaccines, they can’t give people the disease they’re trying to prevent or trigger allergies to eggs or other traditiona­l vaccine ingredient­s.

Most of the COVID- 19 vaccines under developmen­t introduce copies of the same “spike” protein found on the surface of the virus that causes COVID- 19. They train the immune system to recognize this protein and attack in case of infection. The mRNA vaccines direct the machinery of human cells to manufactur­e that spike protein.

The downside is mRNA molecules are fragile. To keep them from falling apart, researcher­s spent years figuring out how to encase the mRNAs in tiny droplets of fat. In Pfizer/ BioNTech’s vaccine, that fat has to stay at supercold temperatur­es, so it maintains its shape and shields the mRNA.

Moderna figured out how to maintain droplets for longer at warmer temperatur­es, so its vaccine needs to be stored at only normal freezing temperatur­es, or for up to a month in a fridge.

The fat droplet boosts the effectiveness of the vaccine, turning more cells into spike- protein- producing machines, Weissman said, which may be why they proved so effective against COVID- 19.

Messenger RNA past and promise

It took years of work for Weissman and a Penn colleague, Katalin Karikó, to find that if they swapped out one of the building blocks of RNA – called a nucleoside – not only would they solve their inflammation problem, the mRNA would make much more of the desired protein.

“We thought at that point it would be a great therapeuti­c,” said Weissman, whose research is funded by BioNTech.

Weissman and Karikó used their modified mRNA to make a hormone called erythropoi­etin, the absence of which causes a lack of red blood cells, leading to anemia.

“It worked beautifull­y,” Weissman said. So far, the results are confined to a lab dish, mice and macaque monkeys. Someday, he hopes to test similar approaches against diseases in people.

In their lab, Weissman and his colleagues tested experiment­al vaccines against about 30 diseases. “It’s looked great in just about all,” he said.

Experiment­al mRNA vaccines have protected mice and ferrets against all types of flu. They appeared effective against genital herpes and malaria. They produced proteins that have gone missing in a wide variety of diseases, such as cystic fibrosis.

In addition to tackling COVID- 19, Moderna has been developing mRNA vaccines against infectious diseases such as Zika and chikunguny­a, as well as others to fight cancer.

Now that COVID- 19 vaccines have proved the mRNA approach can work, there should be much more enthusiasm – and money – to pursue other mRNA vaccines and therapies.

“The potential is just enormous,” Weissman said.

Over the next few years, he and other scientists will work to reduce side effects from mRNA vaccines and therapies, while making them cheaper to manufactur­e, more stable at warmer temperatur­es and more potent – so they can hopefully be given in one dose, instead of the two shots needed against COVID- 19.

“My expectatio­n is that those practical aspects, such as the temperatur­e storage and stability over time at different temperatur­es, will continue to improve moving forward,” said Dan Barouch, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, both in Boston.

Barouch and others dream of a vaccine that could be dispatched within a few months of a new outbreak.

“This ( pandemic) would have evolved very differently if we had been able to immunize back in March,” noted Bruce Walker, who directs the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard, which focuses on immunology and vaccine developmen­t.

“As we get more experience with these vaccines and as we learn from this pandemic how to actually scale up rapidly,” he said, “I think more and more time can be shaved off.”

A year ago, people would have said getting a vaccine developed and ready for the public within a year would be impossible. But two COVID- 19 vaccines are likely to receive federal approval next month, and several more aren’t far behind.

“We’ve shown that’s possible,” Walker said. “And now we have to set our aspiration­s even higher.”

“Investment in basic science only helps. Even if it looks like some arcane idea that doesn’t make sense, that kind of knowledge and basic understand­ing of biology and how things work are really informativ­e to this kind of program.” Dr. Barney Graham, Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

 ?? CINCINNATI CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL ?? Katelyn Evans, 16, gets the first of two shots as part of a trial testing of Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine in minors.
CINCINNATI CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL Katelyn Evans, 16, gets the first of two shots as part of a trial testing of Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine in minors.

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