Houston Chronicle Sunday

New RSV research lifts hopes for vaccine

- By Lauran Neergaard

New research shows vaccinatin­g pregnant women helped protect their newborns from the common but scary respirator­y virus called RSV that fills hospitals with wheezing babies each fall.

The preliminar­y results buoy hope that after decades of failure and frustratio­n, vaccines against RSV may finally be getting close.

Pfizer announced that a large internatio­nal study found vaccinatin­g moms-to-be was nearly 82 percent effective at preventing severe cases of RSV in their babies' most vulnerable first 90 days of life.

At age 6 months, the vaccine still was proving 69 percent effective against serious illness — and there were no signs of safety problems in mothers or babies.

“Moms are always giving their antibodies to their baby,” said virologist Kena Swanson, Pfizer's vice president of viral vaccines. “The vaccine just puts them in that much better position” to form and pass on RSVfightin­g antibodies.

The vaccine quest isn't just to protect infants. RSV is dangerous for older adults, too, and both Pfizer and rival GSK recently announced that their competing shots also proved protective for seniors.

None of the findings will help this year when an early RSV surge already is crowding children's hospitals.

But they raise the prospect that one or more vaccines might become available before next fall's RSV season.

“My fingers are crossed,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University. “We're making inroads.”

The new data was reported in a press release and hasn't been vetted by independen­t experts.

Here's a look at the long quest for RSV vaccines.

What is RSV?

For most healthy people, RSV, or respirator­y syncytial virus, is a cold-like nuisance. But for the very young, the elderly and people with certain health problems, it can be serious, even lifethreat­ening.

The virus can infect deep in the lungs, causing pneumonia, and in babies it can impede breathing by inflaming tiny airways.

In the U.S., about 58,000 children younger than 5 are hospitaliz­ed for RSV each year and several hundred die. Among adults 65 and older, about 177,000 are hospitaliz­ed with RSV and 14,000 die annually.

Worldwide, RSV kills about 100,000 children a year, mostly in poor countries.

Why is there no vaccine?

A tragedy in the 1960s set back the whole field. Using the approach that led to the first polio vaccine, scientists made an experiment­al RSV vaccine by growing the virus in a lab and killing it. But testing in children found not only was the vaccine not protective, youngsters who caught RSV after vaccinatio­n fared worse. Two died.

“For a period of 20 years, even though science was advancing, nobody wanted to go near developmen­t of an RSV vaccine,” Schaffner said.

Even today's modern RSV vaccine candidates were tested first in older adults, not children, he noted.

What got developmen­t back on track?

Modern vaccines tend to target the outer surface of a virus, what the immune system sees when a germ invades. For RSV, that target is the so-called F protein that helps the virus latch onto human cells. Again there was a hurdle: That protein is a shapeshift­er, rearrangin­g its form before and after it “fuses” to cells.

It turns out that the immune system only forms effective RSVfightin­g antibodies when it spots what's called the pre-fusion version of that protein, explained structural biologist Jason McLellan of the University of Texas at Austin.

In 2013, McLellan and virologist Barney Graham were working at the National Institutes of Health when they homed in on the correct shape and figured out how to freeze it in that form. That finding opened the way to today's developmen­t of a variety of experiment­al RSV vaccine candidates.

(That same discovery was key to the hugely successful COVID-19 vaccines, as the coronaviru­s also is cloaked in a shapeshift­ing surface protein.)

What’s in the pipeline?

Several companies are creating RSV vaccines but Pfizer and rival GSK are furthest along. Both companies recently reported final-stage testing in older adults. The competing vaccines are made somewhat differentl­y but each proved strongly effective, especially against serious disease. Both companies plan to seek regulatory approval in the U.S. by the end of the year, as well as in other countries.

The older-adult data “looks fantastic,” said McLellan, who has closely followed the vaccine developmen­t. “I think we're on the right track.”

And if vaccinatin­g pregnant women pans out, it could be “a win for two individual­s instead of just one,” by offering protection to both mom-to-be and baby, said Dr. Wilbur Chen of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Pfizer's maternal vaccine is the same recipe that it tested successful­ly in older adults — and it also plans to seek Food and Drug Administra­tion approval for those vaccinatio­ns by year's end.

The new study included 7,400 pregnant women in 18 countries, including the U.S., and spanned multiple RSV seasons. Preliminar­y results reported Tuesday show the vaccine was most effective against severe disease. For milder illness, effectiven­ess was 51 percent to 57 percent short of the study's statistica­l requiremen­ts but a result that Pfizer still called clinically meaningful because it could mean fewer trips to the doctor's office.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Meredith Legree of Lakeville, Minn., holds her son Andrew as respirator­y therapist Sirena Ortega places a mask on his face to help him to breathe easier as they wait for RSV test results.
Tribune News Service file photo Meredith Legree of Lakeville, Minn., holds her son Andrew as respirator­y therapist Sirena Ortega places a mask on his face to help him to breathe easier as they wait for RSV test results.

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