Vaccines Adapted for Variants Will Not Need Lengthy Testing, FDA Says (nytimes.com) 103
The Food and Drug Administration said this week that vaccine developers would not need to conduct lengthy randomized controlled trials for vaccines that have been adapted to protect against concerning coronavirus variants. From a report: The recommendations, which call for small trials more like those required for annual flu vaccines, would greatly accelerate the review process at a time when scientists are increasingly anxious about how the variants might slow or reverse progress made against the virus. The guidance was part of a slate of new documents the agency released on Monday, including others addressing how antibody treatments and diagnostic tests might need to be retooled to respond to the virus variants. Together, they amounted to the federal government's most detailed acknowledgment of the threat the variants pose to existing vaccines, treatments and tests for the coronavirus, and came weeks after the F.D.A.'s acting commissioner, Dr. Janet Woodcock, said the agency was developing a plan.
"The emergence of the virus variants raises new concerns about the performance of these products," Dr. Woodcock said in a statement Monday. "We want the American public to know that we are using every tool in our toolbox to fight this pandemic, including pivoting as the virus adapts." Most of the vaccine manufacturers with authorized vaccines or candidates in late-stage trials have already announced plans to adjust their products to address the vaccine variants. The Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines use mRNA technology that the companies have said can be used to alter the existing vaccines within six weeks, although testing and manufacturing would take longer. Moderna has already begun developing a new version of its vaccine that could be used as a booster shot against a virus variant that originated in South Africa, known as B.1.351, which seems to dampen the effectiveness of the existing vaccines. A fast-spreading coronavirus variant first observed in Britain has also gained a worrisome mutation that could make it harder to control with vaccines. That variant with the mutation was found in the United States last week.
"The emergence of the virus variants raises new concerns about the performance of these products," Dr. Woodcock said in a statement Monday. "We want the American public to know that we are using every tool in our toolbox to fight this pandemic, including pivoting as the virus adapts." Most of the vaccine manufacturers with authorized vaccines or candidates in late-stage trials have already announced plans to adjust their products to address the vaccine variants. The Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines use mRNA technology that the companies have said can be used to alter the existing vaccines within six weeks, although testing and manufacturing would take longer. Moderna has already begun developing a new version of its vaccine that could be used as a booster shot against a virus variant that originated in South Africa, known as B.1.351, which seems to dampen the effectiveness of the existing vaccines. A fast-spreading coronavirus variant first observed in Britain has also gained a worrisome mutation that could make it harder to control with vaccines. That variant with the mutation was found in the United States last week.
mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:5, Interesting)
Unlike previous vaccines, where we need to grow the virus. the mRNA we just need to send over its code, and we can create new vaccines at a much more rapid pace.
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Re:mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:5, Informative)
because we fully understand what mRNA is and how it works
Note: it's dangerous to say "we fully understand" about anything in the body, because there is a lot. Moreover, understanding how the proteins created as a result is even more difficult. It's more accurate to say:
We think it's safe based on what we know about mRNA (which is a lot), but we double-checked by doing multiple double-blind studies to make sure it was ok.
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The number of people who die from our lack of understanding is likely lower than the number who would die if we did nothing. The debate comes in when we instead compare it instead to only doing the conventional thing.
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We know it's safe because we fully understand what mRNA is and how it works. Thats all.
Then don't get the vaccines, or any vaccine for that matter. What evidence do you have that mRNA is dangerous?
Do you claim that there is a death rate from mRNA that exceeds the death rate from Covid 19, and do you also claim that the disfigurement, cardiopulmonary effects, and Nervous system issues (brain fog) are worse in People who have had mRNA vaccines?
I'd love the citations for that. At what point do we "fully understand" mRNA effects? That would be never.
Re: mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:2, Insightful)
Your metrics for using mRNA seem to weigh your personal list of the atrocities of Covid against itself.
Since none of us have any concept of what will happen to a complex system when it is adjusted, much less how it will compare against your arbitrary list, I would recommend caution, not the abandonment of caution.
We can save drastic measures for when we have a serious situation. Covid has no chance of affecting our position at the top of the food chain. We can take measured steps with this generation and
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Your metrics for using mRNA seem to weigh your personal list of the atrocities of Covid against itself.
Since none of us have any concept of what will happen to a complex system when it is adjusted, much less how it will compare against your arbitrary list, I would recommend caution, not the abandonment of caution.
Well, there is a vaccine, and there is the virus.
If your caution tells you that you would rather take your chances because you have no idea if the vaccine will make you grow horns in 50 years, then cast your lot. Arguing is futile, and anti-vaxxers have a long history of having no care about other people, so truth is, make your choice. It's your life, and if you decide that you are okay with the alternative, it's your gamble. If that makes you smarter than me - enjoy!
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Anti-vaxxing and horns have nothing to do with rational discourse. You are putting words down, and maybe thinking before you do it, but your product is not productive to the discussion. Please play in the real world, rather than one crafted by intentional sensationalism. propaganda, and media hyperbole.
There are many other relevant things than the vaccine and the virus. Limiting the discussion in this way is indicative of zero sum game strategy. Fortunately, nothing in the medical field, much less the wi
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Anti-vaxxing and horns have nothing to do with rational discourse. You are putting words down, and maybe thinking before you do it, but your product is not productive to the discussion.
Well, what is productive to the discussion? That is pretty important to make clear.
Please play in the real world, rather than one crafted by intentional sensationalism. propaganda, and media hyperbole.
In the real world, we have biologists who come up with plans to extract money from Big Pharma, by playing on the sympathy of Juries and the public. I shall give you non media citations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] And there are still people who believe that the MMR vaccine causes autism.
Also in the real world, there is even a subgroup that claims that the vaccine has microchips in it. https://www.popularmechanics.c. [popularmechanics.com]
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Proper medical trials are rational. Emergency medical use vaccines distributed to hundreds of millions of people without proper testing is fucking crazy, just like you.
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Injecting naked RNA has been shown to cause adverse reactions in several drug development studies. That's one of the reasons that, until now, Moderna hasn't been able to develop an approved drug for the ten years it's been in existence. Figuring out how to wrap the RNA in an envelope of lipids (and what lipids to use) is apparently what made it safe enough to pass clinical trials for emergency use. Still causes severe allergic reactions in some people, t
Re: mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:2)
Some people drop dead after eating a peanut. Do we can all peanut based products? Are peanuts unsafe? The people in the UK having reactions to the Pfizer vaccine carry epipens with them at all times. If that's not you don't worry.
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Some people drop dead after eating a peanut. Do we can all peanut based products? Are peanuts unsafe? The people in the UK having reactions to the Pfizer vaccine carry epipens with them at all times. If that's not you don't worry.
There were some cases where the allergic tried to have all nut products banned. There was a young lady a few years back that considered herself kicked out of college because the university couldn't eliminate all nut products from the school https://abcnews.go.com/Health/... [go.com]
I received my first vaccine this morning, You get it, you then have to wait 15 minutes, then you go about your day. No one and any reaction at all. Most were bored and wanted to scoot.
If there is one thing for certain, there are peop
Re: mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:2)
Both my wife and I have had our second injections of the phizer. Vaccine. After the injection site was sore. After the second both my wife and her sister developed major body aches relived with ibroprofren. I had major exhaustion.
Mrna vaccines are new. Long periods of study are required to make certain they are safe and effective. Phizers approval and effectiveness was based on just 170 cases. Yes they had 40,000 people in the study. Only 170 out of the 20,000 who received the vaccine and not placebo
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Both my wife and I have had our second injections of the phizer. Vaccine. After the injection site was sore. After the second both my wife and her sister developed major body aches relived with ibroprofren. I had major exhaustion.
I have heard that the second dose can kick one's butt for a short time. https://www.verywellhealth.com... [verywellhealth.com] It's one of those things, an immune system reaction. Hopefully all are well now.
Mrna vaccines are new. Long periods of study are required to make certain they are safe and effective.
Well yeah. But the same is true of any vaccine. Real world experience is many orders of magnitude more people, with more differing conditions. But considering that for some groups, not able to receive top tier treatment like stem cell therapy in some of the world's best hospitals - the 'rona is just about a death sentence,
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Mrna vaccines are new. Long periods of study are required to make certain they are safe and effective.
Millions of people got it now, so number-wise no more tests are needed.
I haven't heard a theory of how it could cause a long-term damage, which is not visible in the short term. So I would say we can be quite sure that it will be ok. Though I guess to be completely sure it has to be observed for a long time. Still, I would say the virus is orders of magnitue of a larger risk regarding that.
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Injecting naked RNA has been shown to cause adverse reactions in several drug development studies. That's one of the reasons that, until now, Moderna hasn't been able to develop an approved drug for the ten years it's been in existence. Figuring out how to wrap the RNA in an envelope of lipids (and what lipids to use) is apparently what made it safe enough to pass clinical trials for emergency use. Still causes severe allergic reactions in some people, though I don't think we know whether the allergic reaction is to RNA, one of the lipids used to make the envelope, a combination, or something else.
Yeah, some people are allergic. Some children are killed by the DPT shot. Then again, some people are killed by pertussis, diptheria and tetanus. And Covid 19.
It's up to you, my good man. Anything injected into your body can cause anaphylactic shock, sometimes even things you aren't allergic to, just an almost random thing.
Me? I'd rather die by jumping off a bridge than endure a bradykinin storm. Even worse would be recovering, but suffering from cardiopulmonary problems, amputations and mental fog that
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who fully understand mRNA and how it works? Do you? Apparently there are many Medical Doctors who don't or disagree it is safe.
I have 2 MD I'm friends with, one took it ( he is 70 a semi-retired heart surgeon) the other younger ( 50 is pediatrician) is waiting until she has seen its effects on more people, she is by no means anti-vax being from the Philippines and having seen many children die from lack of vaccine.
There is no reason to think the FDA is acting anything other then politically here , with the
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https://www.statnews.com/2017/... [statnews.com]
At least based on that above, Moderna was focused on using mRNA injections to treat genetic diseases. They effectively wanted a regular treatment that would provide patients with replacement mRNA when they could not synthesize the correct proteins naturally. That treatment wouldn't just need to inject mRNA into the cells, it would also be responsible for regulating the amount of proteins made for a patient indefinitely and that balance is hard to achieve. Vaccines were being
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You're right. It was all a plot to inject you with "teh gay"
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Wait, I won't be getting 5G microchips with my vaccine? I want a refund! In advance!
Re: mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:2)
It was to expensive for 5g chips for the vaccine (because of the ban on huawei). So instead they convinced the mass just to Cathy portable tracking devices everywhere they go
Re:mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:5, Interesting)
To say that it's interesting is honestly an understatement. We potentially have the ability to generate immune responses to any arbitrary proteins provided that it is dissimilar enough to other essential ones to avoid autoimmune reactions with just it's DNA or RNA sequence. The time to create a treatment was on the order of a few weeks so if we can quickly isolate the right protein to target, many untreatable pathogens will be treatable. Long term, this could render drug resistance nearly impossible for viral, bacterial, and some eukaryotic pathogens if we can keep a patient alive long enough to sequence the pathogen, isolate the right target, generate the vaccine, and for the patients immune system to generate the antibodies. 30 years of research investment in sequencing and protein simulation could be about to pay off in spades.
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Yup, coming to a science fiction book near you and the frontrunner 2030 Russian presidential election candidate running against Putin.
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Well I mean there's no point. We already have a large amount of toxic substances that we can cheaply produce to kill people to which there is no remedy. Why spend all the money to sequence out the needed code and production systems just to kill someone, when you can just do that with something we already have? I mean fuck, if you really just want someone dead, bullets still do the job quite nicely as don't require years of development. And if you just want a lot of people dead, plenty of nerve agents ou
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You are confused there is only one human race. What you meant to say, what happens when it is toxic to a particular genetic trait, say sickle cell or say particular cells like say sperm or ova. Not doing additional testing sounds as suspect as fuck.
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Just want to address this spot since there are people who are legitimately concerned about the possibility:
It's exceedingly unlikely that you'll ever find something toxic only to the person or group you want dead. These vaccines induce autoimmune reactions to proteins. Given that these are effective against multiple variations of the spike protein, the immune response is against a class of very similar proteins. At this point any potential protein to target will also cause reactions among millions of people
Re: mRNA is an interesting technology. (Score:2)
You do realize the Oxford vaccine which is based on a virus was ready by 30th January 2020? Our ability to manipulate DNA and RNA was gone from chariots to the internal combustion engine in less than a decade.
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Of course, the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine appears to be significantly less effective. To the point that many in Europe are insisting on Pfizer instead.
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Its a litttle more complicated than that. For the first and second generation of COVID mutations its plenty effective. 90ish percent after 2 shots. The problem is the newer british and south african variants in the third generation of the virus seem to be somewhat less so.
It'll still reduce the effectiveness of the vaccine. You'll get sick. But you probably wont get the mortal-danger type of sick. Your absolutely better off with it in your arm then without it. But you'd want to eventually get around to the
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Plus the delivery vehicle (lipid nanoparticles) is exactly the same. The only question is whether the newly targeted protein segments yield effective protection; it'll be like just having to do the phase II trial.
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Non mRNA candidates not so much (Score:1)
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mRNA is an other tool that these companies can now work with. However like any tool, they may not work all the time for every job.
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Right, so, when it comes time for me to get a vaccine, it makes sense for me to *not* get the Johnson and Johnson one, because it cannot be updated so easily. There's already reports of people asking about this in Britain, because they want to have the choice between the homegrown Oxford one and the "posh" Pfizer one.
Getting a vaccine is like installing a new operating system. It's easier to update my existing operating system, say, Moderna, to deal with a new virus variant, because Moderna might provide
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Name a person who has had a choice between two. A single person. Anyone? Didnt fucking think so.
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People here kept insisting that you will have a choice of vaccine.
Name a person who has had a choice between two. A single person. Anyone? Didnt fucking think so.
Not completely sure how narrow your definition of "choice" is, but I could have chosen between Moderna and Pfizer by choosing where I got the vaccine at. There was an issue where some people accidentally got the second shot instead of the first, which caused some issues in the supply chain, but yeah - I had a choice. If everyone at every immunization center had to have a choice of either, they'd have to produce twice the number of individual vaccines, or else pre-register way in advance.
Though I'm not qu
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Right, so, when it comes time for me to get a vaccine, it makes sense for me to *not* get the Johnson and Johnson one, because it cannot be updated so easily.
No, not really. Your immune system doesn't really care which type of vaccine you took to prime it.
There does appear to be a difference in efficacy between the various vaccines, but this is probably down to a combination of factors (e.g. adjuvants, delivery mechanism and, possibly, dosage) . However, as far as I can tell, all the vaccines stimulate all the various parts of the immune system (e.g. neutralising antibodies, T cells, and 'memory' cells, among others) to a certain degree before they are eliminate
wait a minute (Score:1)
Re:wait a minute (Score:4, Informative)
They work against some of the strains, but not all of them have been confirmed. Also some of the Vaccines work better on the new strains than others.
I am sorry we cannot give you a simple Yes/No answer. I know the world wants us to say. Take this and you will be perfectly safe, or don't take it because you will get sick. But immunology is a complex topic.
The people who are often knowledgeable about the topic and are telling you the truth, are often people that we don't want to listen to, because they don't want to give you the simple answer, but a big long complex speech with numbers and statistics.
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I know the world wants us to say. Take this and you will be perfectly safe, or don't take it because you will get sick. But immunology is a complex topic.
The people who are often knowledgeable about the topic and are telling you the truth, are often people that we don't want to listen to, because they don't want to give you the simple answer, but a big long complex speech with numbers and statistics.
You don't need a complex speech with numbers and statistics. There is lot of data on these vaccines, and that data is clear: Any of the available vaccines will greatly protect you from getting seriously sick or dying if you're exposed to the COVID virus. The short- and medium-term risk of taking any of the available vaccines is extremely small, and the main possible known risk (allergic reaction) is easily treatable. That's it. That's what you need to know, and to communicate.
There's other stuff where the d
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Not sure what you're aggressively countersignaling here with "That's what you need to know, and to communicate." The OP asked about "new strains," which you only mentioned in terms of "future planning." The OP did not make any hints of being a deplorable "anti-vaxer," yet you seem to have copied the standard antivax-shut-it-down rant at them.
I don't come here to be told what I do and don't need to know, or to be instructed in how to stay on message. I understand why you're doing what you're doing, but I
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No, the vaccines work against the new strains as well. It would have to biologically adapt quite a bit for it to not work. It's the same mechanism where flu shots typically work for 2-3 seasons, the current strain of coronaviruses mutate slower than flu.
This is just the current administration re-confirming what we already knew. As Ned Price (AP reported) said: All of this work was done in the previous administration - you guys are taking credit for stuff that the previous administration did.
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Has it actually been confirmed yet that the original vaccines DON'T work against the new strains? Even a month ago I heard differently from multiple countries' studies.
IANAEMBOARQP* but my understanding is they work well enough.
Basically the point of the vaccine is to train the body to generate an overwhelming immune response that wipes out the virus before it really gets established.
The variants are different enough that the immune response is substantially smaller, however, it still appears to be sufficiently overwhelming to work. That being said, if it's not quite sufficient for a big portion of people, or if the variants get better at avoiding immune responses from th
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Has it actually been confirmed yet that the original vaccines DON'T work against the new strains? Even a month ago I heard differently from multiple countries' studies.
The modRNA vaccines (Pfizer, Moderna), which are also the easy ones to tweak, work by making a few of your cells produce the target spike protein. That means that the set of immunities your body makes due to the vaccine should be exactly the same set of immunities it would make to that protein if you were infected with real COVID.
So the expe
Re: wait a minute (Score:2)
You do realize that tweaking the DNA sequence in the carrier virus of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine is just as trivial? Probably not but news flash it is.
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You do realize that tweaking the DNA sequence in the carrier virus of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine is just as trivial?
Yes.
But the Oxford / AstraZeneca vaccine uses a live adenovirus as the carrier, with a lot of the mechanism in place. (It is missing one piece of machinery to make one compound it needs to form new virus particles - getting it from its culture during manufacture and {hopefully} thus not reproducing in the patient. If it co-infects a cell with a functional adenovirus it may pick up the mi
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Ey Ey Ey! Vaccine Industrial Complex (Score:2)
So if 10 variants appear, we may need 20 shots? I realize some vaccines will work on multiple variants, but not all.
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Yeah, I have a plan for that scenario. My plan is to just die.
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So Trump's plan?
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He'll live in infamy. He's the Henry 8th of our era.
Re:Ey Ey Ey! Vaccine Industrial Complex (Score:4, Informative)
So if 10 variants appear, we may need 20 shots? I realize some vaccines will work on multiple variants, but not all.
An immunocompromised patient in Boston showed dramatic mutations in the virus over the course of 5 months. [npr.org] Many of the mutations looks similar to the mutations in the UK and South Africa. So it appears the virus is mostly staying on a single development path, and there aren't too many forks. Research into immunocompromised COVID patients may reveal likely new strains before they enter the wild, and allow the vaccine development to work ahead.
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The longer the virus is floating and infecting around the world, the more that "creative" variants will emerge. Evolution is relentless.
We may be seeing the "low hanging fruit" of mutations now, but eventually the sheer power of brute-force randomness will give us odd and dangerous variants.
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I always understood those mutations to drive towards less death, not more. SARS-CoV-2's major advantages are the length of the infectious period prior to symptoms and asymptomatic spreaders. If it became more dangerous - causing symptoms earlier, then we're back to early SARS. There, you were only infectious after you started symptoms, so isolation and quarantining was easier.
That's my understanding from talking with doctors. Mutations rarely spread as widely and cause more deaths when they become more
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In the longer run, yes, but within the time frame of a decade or so, a 3% death rate is not enough to make much of a difference.
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We may be seeing the "low hanging fruit" of mutations now, but eventually the sheer power of brute-force randomness will give us odd and dangerous variants.
Getting the virus under control will reduce the number of iterations the virus has dramatically.
Virus mutations are a lot like mining Bitcoin when you think about it. Each person infected with the virus is a processing unit searching for a new viable mutation. We need to shrink the pool of processors.
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If 10? There are quite a few recognized variants, and 10 is a certainty now or soon in the future. But who gives a shit if it takes 20 shots (it won't because the variants can be covered by multiple vaccines and several vaccines can be combined into one shot)? But even, if it takes a shot every few weeks for a year, or every month for a couple years, what is the real downside?
Re: Ey Ey Ey! Vaccine Industrial Complex (Score:2)
At a rate of 2 to 3 per 100,000 jabs, making it far less lethal than risking getting the disease in the first place. Oh and these are allergic reactions so they won't be getting a second jab either reducing the risk associated with a second jab.
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That doesn't make sense. Allergic reactions would happen after the first shot and other reactions attenuate over time. We already know people have far less severe reactions to the second does.
Way to intentionally blur the line there. The deaths, if any, are negligible. Side effects can be severe but are almost a
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Vaccination for multiple variants could be given in a single shot or pair of shots. It will complicate the manufacturing a little bit, but this is something that's already done for the annual "quadrivalent" flu vaccine for example. The mRNA vaccine can be adjusted fairly quickly, so if it's fast-tracked by FDA some of us might be getting multivalent shots this summer.
The rate of mutations is related to how many people are infected at a given time, so it should slow down as case numbers fall. Hopefully the d
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So if 10 variants appear, we may need 20 shots? I realize some vaccines will work on multiple variants, but not all.
In the same way that flu vaccines cover multiple H & N variants within the same shot, to cover the year's predicted common variants, it's entirely possible that multiple variants of this coronavirus vaccine will be combined into a single shot.
However, most of the population do not really need to receive a flu vaccine, and they are generally reserved for the elderly and the immune-compromised. I suspect that the same will hold true for this coronavirus too.
Once a 'low risk' individual has received their
This is a new vaccine! (Score:1)
This new vaccine will cure Corona, the common cold, influenza, cancer, hearth disease and obesity.
The drawbacks? You'll have to work until you retire with 150 years.
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even shorter tests? The current vaccines weren't even tested rigorously.
For the modRNA vaccines the only thing that changes to target a new COVID variant is the spike protein the vaccine makes you present to your immune system. If that change proves deadly (for instance, by making you produce a self-antibody, as with dental caries or scarlet fever provoking an autoimmune reaction against the heart, or polio ditto against myelin), the virus itself would also be similarly deadly (but far moreso, as it gives
Re: funny... (Score:2)
You would just have several different spike proteins in your vaccine, by whatever method the vaccine chooses to produce them. These days the DNA/RNA manipulation required to achieve this is trivial compared to even a decade ago.
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They were tested quite rigorously. The difference is that prior vaccine testing regiments have gotten quite out of hand with the regulation requiring them to be tested for nearly a decade. We know how vaccination works and gotten better at it over the last 150 years. There is no reason that a vaccine should take years and years to get approval.
if enough variants evolve (Score:1)
Great, gamble on new unproven technology (Score:2, Insightful)
Sure, two mRNA vaccines have now been approved, let's cut the testing further. Brilliant.
The other traditional/old methods of vaccine development have at least been around and used for decades; and we understand the strengths and weaknesses of them. But I guess being old is not sexy
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It isn't just that this is faster. It is much, MUCH faster. It also doesn't ruin any delivery vectors for the future.
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This is just like saying we don't understand genetically modified corn when we've literally been genetically modifying corn for centuries. It's just the same thing as developing a regular vaccine but guided to be faster, call it 3D printing for vaccines.
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To suggest there is some equivalent between using selection to modify an organism and injecting random bits of DNA into it is wrongheaded.
When you can show a way of naturally selecting a tomato plant to get a grouper gene the produces anti-freeze in it or corn that is resistant to round-up then we can talk about it being nothing more then a short cut. The possible things that could go wrong due to cross pollicization alone are bad, but what about trans species viral vectors? What does it do to an echo syst
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There are other plants that have "anti-freeze" proteins, pretty much any plant that can survive or grow in winter has them. Cross-breeding is a matter of some (long) process of the preferred nature which we have been doing, specifically to grow plants well into cold weather, that's how we know what proteins and hormones to add.
The issue you mention with disease isn't unique to direct modifications of the gene. It's a problem we've had for the last 150 years with banana cultivars before we even knew what gen
Re: Great, gamble on new unproven technology (Score:3)
It's not new technology its been in development for decades in the first instance. In the second instance the trial period was shortened due to not having to hang around between the stages. For example normally recruitment of volanters takes months, took days. Second the trials cost a lot of money so the risk of going to full trials had not been deemed commercially viable, the pandemic changed that calculation. Finally RNA is as fragile as hell and won't last long in the body. Hell the Pfizer jab needs to b
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never though about that before. What does it degrade into? smaller RNA? how does the body flush it?
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Considering that the COVID-19 vaccines are the VERY FIRST time the mRNA technology has been approved for general use; and that was after a much shortened testing period. We have no long term safety data on ANY mRNA vaccine. What is the testing period that will quell your outrage? the actuarial tables comparison between when vaccinated vs unvaccinated people die?
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Anti-Vaxxer nonsense not insightful (Score:2)
The scale of testing of the COVID vaccines has been huge, the same size has reached much larger sizes, much more quickly. Speed is not sign of a lack of testing when the sample size is large. It actually increases that statistical confidence in the results.
The modified vaccine will be compared against the existing vaccine in trials not a placebo so side effects are actually monitored in both.
Too many Assumptions.make Bad Science (Score:1)
well, since pandoras box has already been opened, (Score:1)
Sorry, you can have MINE (Score:1)
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Did they get a phone call from Boeing ? (Score:2)
Who needs testing ?
Occums razor (Score:2)