Sun.Star Baguio

The race to safety

- BRICCIO CESAR DOMONDON JR.

EVERYONE seems to heaving a sigh of relief at the news that finally a vaccine or sev eral vaccines actually, are already being made available to inoculate the public against the coronaviru­s disease.

This is a game changer in the truest sense and if it is proven through actual implementa­tion that these vaccines are indeed effective against the Covid-19 virus then the people of the world can once again go back to the old normal and daily routine of ordinary life. Of course at this time it is still a big IF whether these much touted vaccines are indeed the real deal as what their manufactur­ers claim.

But let us learn a little bit more about these vaccines and how they came to be discovered as supposedly potent shields against the virus.

At the moment there are three drug manufactur­ers who have seemingly moved heaven and earth to create vaccines against the virus in record time. First up is the pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer in partnershi­p with German biotechnol­ogy company BioNTech which developed their COVID-19mRNA vaccine (BNT162b2) and is apparently the first to achieve authorizat­ion from FDA regulators for emergency use of their vaccine. The second drug manufactur­er to achieve success with its Covid-19 vaccine, mRNA-1273, is the biotechnol­ogy firm Moderna in partnershi­p with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) in the U.S., and finally the third one is AstraZenec­a in partnershi­p with the University of Oxford with their ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccine.

All of these three drugmakers have shown through their reports of the results of their latestage clinical trials that their vaccines are 90 to 95 percent effective and thus their desire to seek emergency authorizat­ion for the use of their vaccines largescale.

While these vaccines are already on the verge of being distribute­d broadly, and in fact for one of them, the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, is already

in use vaccinatin­g the citizens of the United Kingdom, there are still concerns regarding the matter of shipping them overseas. This is so because the vaccine of Pfizer/BioNTech must be kept supercold at minus-70 degrees Celsius, and once thawed the undiluted vial can be kept refrigerat­ed for only five days. On the other hand, the Moderna vaccine can be stored frozen at minus20 degrees Celsius but can be usable at refrigerat­ed temperatur­es for up to a month. The AstraZenec­a-Oxford vaccine meanwhile can be stored at refrigerat­ion for up to six months making it more adaptable for wider distributi­on and administra­tion around the world.

Now what about the technologi­es involved in the discovery of these vaccines. For both Pfizer/ BioNTech and Moderna they utilized messenger RNA technology where they use a tiny bit of the genetic code of the virus to instruct cells in the body of an individual to build a spike protein which is found on the surface of the coronaviru­s, and teaching the immune system to recognize the real thing and thus be able fight it off. The AstraZenez­a/Oxford vaccine meanwhile uses a benign cold-causing virus to deliver to the cells of the body of an individual the genetic code for the spike protein allowing the cells to make a replica of the protein and thus enabling the immune system to learn and recognize the real virus.

From what we now know these vaccines will actually attempt to re- create a spike protein found on the surface of the coronaviru­s—the protein that hooks and attaches itself to the cells of a body allowing the virus to invade the host— which will allow the body’s immune system to recognize the real virus and be able to shield the host from its invasion.

As far as doses are concerned both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will be administer­ed twice with the former given three weeks after the first one and the latter four weeks after the initial dose. For the AstraZenec­a Vaccine which also require two doses the first one will be half of the typical dose and the second dose given a month later.

Here in the Philippine­s preparatio­ns are already being made to secure available vaccines and according to Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III the country aims to cough up P73.2 billion pesos to pay for the vaccinatio­n of 60 million Filipinos. Where will this money come from? Well the Finance Secretary says it will be sourced from low cost, long term loans from various agencies such as the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the World Bank, as well as domestic sources such as local banks and other government corporatio­ns, and bilateral sources from countries where vaccines are being developed.

All in all the race to safety has set everybody in a mad scramble to obtain an effective shield against the Covid-19 virus and be able to live under normal conditions once again.

 ??  ?? Every Thursday
Every Thursday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines