Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Are new vaccines necessary now?

Question is at the heart of a different COVID-19 debate

- By Lauran Neergaard

COVID-19 vaccines are saving an untold number of lives, but they can’t stop the chaos when a hugely contagious new mutant bursts on the scene, leading people to wonder: Will we need boosters every few months? A new vaccine recipe? A new type of shot altogether?

That’s far from settled, but with the shots still doing their main job many experts are cautioning against setting too high a bar.

“We need collective­ly to be rethinking what is the goal of vaccinatio­n,” said Dr. Daniel Kuritzkes, infectious disease chief at Brigham & Women’s Hospital. “It’s unrealisti­c ... to believe that any kind of vaccinatio­n is going to protect people from infection, from mild symptomati­c disease, forever.”

If the goal is preventing serious illness, “we may not need to be doing as much fine-tuning of the vaccines every time a new variant comes.”

The virus is essentiall­y shape-shifting as it mutates, with no way to know how bad the next variant will be. Already a sub-strain of omicron bearing its own unique mutations is circulatin­g.

Research is underway to create next-generation vaccines that might offer broader protection against future mutants — but they won’t be ready soon.

In the near-term, getting today’s shots into more arms will “reduce the opportunit­ies for the virus to mutate and spawn new Greek letters that we then have to worry about,” said Jennifer Nuzzo of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

Why immunity isn’t perfect: The job of blocking infection

falls to antibodies, which form after either vaccinatio­n or a prior bout with COVID-19, ready to fight back the next time someone’s exposed.

One problem, however, is that mutations change the appearance of the spike protein that covers the coronaviru­s. That’s why omicron was more able to slip past that first defense than earlier variants — its spike coating was harder for existing antibodies to recognize.

Also, the immune system isn’t designed to be in a constant state of high alert, so the antibodies that fend off infection do wane over time. Several months after two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, people had little protection against an omicron infection — a result of both waning antibodies and the variant’s

mutation.

Thankfully, different immune system soldiers called T cells are key to prevent an infection from turning into severe illness — and that protection is lasting longer because T cells are recognizin­g other parts of the virus that don’t mutate as easily.

A third dose matters: After a booster, protection against symptomati­c disease from omicron is about 70% — not as good as the 94% protection seen with earlier variants that more closely matched the vaccine yet highly effective.

Importantl­y, the booster also further strengthen­ed protection against serious illness.

Researcher­s are closely tracking if infection-fighting antibodies stick around

longer after a third dose — but at some point, those levels are guaranteed to wane again. So-called memory cells can make more the next time the body senses they’re needed.

Still, Israel is offering a fourth dose to some people, including those 60 and older, and mulling giving the additional booster to all adults.

The debate is whether repeated boosting really is the best approach — especially since scary new variants are less likely to form once more of the world’s population gets initial vaccinatio­ns.

Endless boosting just to keep antibody levels constantly high is “not a public health strategy that works,” said Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

Pfizer and Moderna are testing omicron-specific boosters in some American adults, although it’s far from clear if authoritie­s would abandon a vaccine recipe proven to save lives for a tweaked version in hopes of fewer breakthrou­gh infections.

Brewing a single shot with two kinds of vaccine is technicall­y possible but, again, they’d have to prove the mixture doesn’t weaken the original protection against severe illness.

New approaches: Whatever happens with omicron, it’s clear the coronaviru­s is here to stay and the U.S. National Institutes of Health is funding about $43 million in projects to develop so-called “pan-coronaviru­s” vaccines that promise to protect against more than one type.

One possibilit­y: Nanopartic­les that carry pieces of spike proteins from four to eight different versions of the virus rather than the single type in today’s vaccines.

It’s a tantalizin­g idea, but NIH infectious diseases chief Dr. Anthony Fauci called it a yearslong endeavor. “I don’t want anyone to think that pan-coronaviru­s vaccines are literally around the corner,” he said.

A possibly more direct approach: Creating COVID19 vaccines that can be squirted into the nose to form antibodies ready to fight the virus right where we first encounter it. Nasal vaccines are harder to develop than injected versions but attempts are underway, including a large study just announced by India’s Bharat Biotech.

 ?? PFIZER 2021 ?? A technician inspects vials that are filled with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the company’s facility in Puurs, Belgium.
PFIZER 2021 A technician inspects vials that are filled with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the company’s facility in Puurs, Belgium.

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