Experts Explain: How do Covid-19 vaccines work, and do they help?
Covid-19 vaccine:
Five days into India's mass vaccination programme, there are some concerns over
vaccine hesitancy. At this crucial moment in the fight against the novel
coronavirus pandemic, two of the country’s most eminent vaccine scientists
weigh in on some old and new questions.
Frontline
health workers are administered Covid-19 vaccines in NRS Medical College
Hospital in
Kolkata
on January 16, 2021. (Express Photo: Partha Paul)
It
has been five days since India began vaccination against the novel coronavirus disease. More than 7 lakh people have been
given one of the two vaccines approved by the regulator. But several people,
including some doctors and other healthcare workers, continue to be hesitant.
This has led to concerns over ‘vaccine hesitancy’.
Vaccines
are a product of science. If the scientific method and process is followed
scrupulously, based on data and evidence, there should be little room for
doubt. This is a good time to revisit some of the usual questions regarding
vaccines, and to address fresh questions that are emerging.
How
do vaccines work; and do they help?
A vaccine is a substance that
resembles the disease-causing agent (called pathogen, the coronavirus in this
case) that trains the body’s immune system and creates a ‘memory’. When the
pathogen infects in future, this memory is rapidly deployed to destroy it and
prevent disease.
Evidence shows that incidence of
an infectious disease goes down rapidly following the deployment of vaccines
against it; several human diseases are now vaccine preventable. Besides the
eradication of smallpox and near eradication of polio, vaccines have resulted
in the prevention of over 20 other life-threatening diseases, avoiding an
estimated 2-3 million deaths annually. India’s Universal Immunization
Programme, among the world’s largest, immunizes about 26 million children every
year. It is estimated that every dollar spent on childhood vaccines adds $44 to
the economy by ensuring that children grow up to be healthy adults.
THE EXPERTS
Shahid Jameel, one of India's
best known virologists, is currently director of Trivedi School of Biosciences
at Ashoka University. He has previously worked with the Delhi-based
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB) and
served as chief executive of the Wellcome Trust/DBT Alliance which funds health
research. Virander Singh Chauhan is a former director of ICGEB. He is best
known for his efforts towards developing a vaccine for malaria.
Vaccines
take long to develop. How could the Covid-19 vaccines be ready so soon?
It can indeed take several years
to develop a vaccine. After a proof of concept has been established in research
laboratories, controlled manufacturing processes are developed to make stable
and highly pure products that are tested on animals and then on humans for
safety and effectiveness. Clinical trials in human beings are carried out in
three phases to seek specific answers.
Phase 1: is done in
typically 20-100 healthy volunteers to see if the vaccine is safe, if it
appears to work, whether there are any serious side effects, and if these are
related to the size of the dose.
Phase 2: uses
several hundred volunteers to determine the most common short-term side
effects, and how well the immune system responds to the vaccine — what is known
as ‘immunogenicity’.
Phase 3: involves
thousands of volunteers in a blinded manner to compare those who get the
vaccine to those who don’t (they get a placebo or dummy) to re-confirm safety,
serious side-effects if any, and most importantly, whether the vaccine is
efficacious in preventing infection and/or disease.
In the present case, vaccines for Covid-19 have
been readied within a year. There are currently 68 Covid-19 vaccines in human
clinical trials, of which 20 have reached phase 3 testing, eight have received
limited or emergency use approval, and two have been approved for full use.
There are several reasons why
Covid-19 vaccines were developed so quickly. Scientific information has been
shared openly, and it helped that the virus was similar to the SARS-CoV-1 and
MERS viruses on which considerable work had already been done. It took just 63
days from the availability of the genome sequence (on January 11, 2020), for
the Moderna mRNA-1273 vaccine to enter phase 1 trial in the United States.
Regulators have also allowed
parallel phases of clinical testing and reviewing of data to expedite the
process. Large investments by governments and innovative financial models
allowed pharmaceutical companies to work on developing the vaccine without
having to absorb all the financial risk.
NOTE— Watch the video to
know more.
Another crucial reason was the use of
every available vaccine platform to produce a Covid-19 vaccine, including those
that had so far not produced a vaccine for humans. The vaccines made by
Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna both directly deliver an mRNA fragment into human
cells to produce the viral Spike protein which raises anti-viral immunity. This
technology had been in development for about a decade for anti-cancer vaccines.
Similarly, non-replicating viral
vectors had been in development for years. An experimental adenovirus-based
Ebola vaccine was used to vaccinate about 60,000 people in West Africa during
the 2014-16 Ebola outbreak. Researchers at Oxford University in the United
Kingdom had been using the chimpanzee adenovirus platform for several
experimental vaccines, which was quickly repurposed to develop a Covid-19
vaccine. Finally, vaccines based on inactivated viruses is a time-tested
method, which has been used in the ICMR/Bharat Biotech vaccine as also in at
least three vaccines from China.
It is important to also
understand the limitations of each platform. The mRNA is a fragile molecule
that requires protection, including frozen storage, which complicates its
rollout logistics. Viral vector vaccines are more stable (2 to 8 deg C
storage), but the same vector cannot be used for another disease in the same
person because anti-vector immunity will make it ineffective. Though
inactivated viral vaccines are generally safe, similar vaccines against
respiratory syncytial virus and measles were withdrawn as they exacerbated the
disease.
BY- Keshav Kansal

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