Moderna Starts Human Trials of An mRNA-Based Flu Shot (theverge.com) 81
Yesterday, Moderna announced that the first set of volunteers in a clinical trial have received its mRNA-based seasonal flu vaccine. The Verge reports: Before the COVID-19 pandemic, mRNA vaccines were still largely experimental, even as they were heralded as the future of vaccine development. People who get an mRNA vaccine are injected with tiny snippets of genetic material from the target virus. Their cells use that genetic information to build bits of the virus, which the body's immune system learns to fight against. The high efficacy of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines made by Moderna and Pfizer / BioNTech was a major endorsement for this type of vaccine. Now, pharmaceutical companies plan to use this technology to fight other types of infectious diseases, including flu.
The flu shots available each year in the United States are usually between 40 and 60 percent effective. The most common shots are made by growing the influenza virus in cells or chicken eggs, and then killing the virus so it's no longer dangerous. It takes a long time to grow the virus, so companies have to start making the shots around six months ahead of time, based on predictions around which strain of the flu will be circulating that year. Pharmaceutical companies hope that mRNA-based flu vaccines can be more effective than the traditional shots. Because they'd be faster to make, production wouldn't have to start so far in advance, and they could theoretically be more closely matched with the type of flu spreading each season.
The flu shots available each year in the United States are usually between 40 and 60 percent effective. The most common shots are made by growing the influenza virus in cells or chicken eggs, and then killing the virus so it's no longer dangerous. It takes a long time to grow the virus, so companies have to start making the shots around six months ahead of time, based on predictions around which strain of the flu will be circulating that year. Pharmaceutical companies hope that mRNA-based flu vaccines can be more effective than the traditional shots. Because they'd be faster to make, production wouldn't have to start so far in advance, and they could theoretically be more closely matched with the type of flu spreading each season.
Viral shutdown. (Score:2)
Social distancing, masking, and shutdowns should have curbed the need a great deal.
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Social distancing, masking, and shutdowns should have curbed the need a great deal.
They did. It is certainly helpful that hospitals stressed with COVID patients did not have many flu patients to deal with. https://www.scientificamerican... [scientificamerican.com]
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Gonna wait for the trials to conclude!
Hell yes if Phase III finds it safe and effective. My wife has a low white count and I'm religious about flu shots. If this is anywhere near as good as the COVID vaccines I will tear down walls to get it.
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Only if it comes with free Wi-Fi and can hang a spoon from my nose. :-)
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Yes, the flu disappeared. It wasn't that anyone with flu like symptoms and dialed up PCR tests basically marked everyone in the hospital as COVID. Or did they have a flu PCR test too to be "scientifically" accurate?
Well, around here if you are sick with respiratory symptoms but test negative for COVID, that does not mean they give up and just pretend it is COVID. Typically they will do more tests to find other causes.
I live in the first world though, can't speak to where you live.
And they do indeed have a flu PCR test. Sometimes it even finds unexpected things.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada... [www.cbc.ca]
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The Gates Foundation has a flu surveillance system at least in the USA.
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Well, I know someone who will be very pleased. After all, once everyone has a superpower [youtu.be], it's not a superpower anymore.
Re:Viral shutdown. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, the flu disappeared. It wasn't that anyone with flu like symptoms and dialed up PCR tests basically marked everyone in the hospital as COVID. Or did they have a flu PCR test too to be "scientifically" accurate?
Speaking as someone who was definitively diagnosed with H1N1 2009 during the coronavirus pandemic, let me just say that you're full of s**t.
The fact of the matter is that the positivity rate — the percentage of flu tests that come pack positive — was at an all-time low through the entire coronavirus pandemic. Now if they had massively increased the number of flu tests, that could be explained away, but they didn't. The number of flu tests was actually lower than usual, which would tend to result in a higher-than-normal positivity rate. Yet it was darn near zero.
So to get those numbers without a real reduction in flu would require a massive worldwide conspiracy to give flu tests only to people who they are certain have coronavirus. In other words, there's no way in h**l that your theory is plausible, given the actual numbers.
And that "worldwide" thing is worth pointing out again. The huge drop in flu cases was worldwide, not just in the U.S.
Rather than explain why flu went away so dramatically, I'll just link to one of the many other times that I have done so [slashdot.org].
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Dunno about where you live but around here many people have remarked that no one had the flu in the past year. No sniffling nose dribblers; no coughing mega spreaders.
My pharmacist commented that normally over the October to April period she will sell about 1500 NeoCitran packages; this past winter she sold ONE.
Mind you this is just anecdotal but it is in agreement with the stats from health authorities.
Masks and distancing? Higher take rate for the flu vaccine? Just one of those years? Lying bastard
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That dialed up PCR test BS is a myth. Having done literally thousands of PCRs (not COVID diagnostic, but similar enough) manually myself I can tell you that increasing the number of PCR cycles can't give you a false positive. At worst, you might get random bands, but the probability of those bands being the same length as expected from the virus gene fragment amplification would be super rare .. it would happen in far less than 1% of tests.
Some people are still willfully ignorant. (Score:2)
The social distance was a joke and was based on STILL air and STILL people. Did not take into account air in motion or people moving. The proper distance to do what the fucking liars were claiming was TEN TIMES that distance, 20m for social distancing to have any affect what so ever.
It's been more than a year now and still some silly people think distancing or masks are an on/off switch.
It lowers the chances and slows the spread. If each infected person infects less than one person, then the case count goes down. It's not rocket science.
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Rubbish the BGC was widely used in the UK until very recently (2005 to be precise). Basically everyone over the age of ~30 has had one. Given the death rate in the UK there is no evidence that being inoculated against TB made any difference whatsoever.
I would be very surprised if the RECOVERY Trial didn't look into it. They have ruled out all the other quack cures.
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So instead of public health measures that we have known about for hundreds of years, we should should have just given everyone TB shots and HCQ. Yeah, that's the ticket! There is a very good reason people much smarter than you are in charge. P
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You don't understand probability very well, do you?
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Oh, they did. The last flu season barely existed. Doctors said they've never seen anything like it. I forget the numbers but they were dramatic.
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I'm not sure what point you think you're making, these measures most certainly did curb the need while those measures were in place. Now that lockdowns are being lifted, people are straight back to the same behaviour as before, having learned exactly nothing in the process. It's not even just the vaccine dodgers, even normal functioning adults seem to forget to socially distance or wear a mask once restrictions begin easing.
Re:mRNA vaccines are still experimental (Score:4, Funny)
1. The government thanks you for your service
2. I thank you for the mansion and yacht
This is legally binding.
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mRNA vaccines were experimental in 2008.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.go... [nih.gov]
Experimental, and safe.
People who know vaccines even better than you know your job are consistent saying that negative effects show up within weeks or almost never. Two months after the last vaccination in the Phase III trials, we had enough data to rule out complications more common than a hundred per million, because there were tens of thousands of people in the acceptance testing.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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How common is it for vaccines (or any single-application medication for that matter) to have side effects that remain hidden for more than a few weeks?
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I realize this will go against established dogma, but mRNA vaccines are still experimental.
Your dogma won't hunt. "Warp speed" apllied to vaccine manufacturing, not testing. mRNA was as well tested as anything else was. And because mRNA causes your body to produce one specified protein, vaccines for new viruses will be developed much faster now that the tech is proven in large populations.
Universal Flu Vaccine (Score:3)
What we need is a universal flu vaccine that protects against most or all strains. They need to find a part of the virus that doesn't change much but is still a valid target for the immune system. That's not easy, but I believe they've been working on it.
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OK, well what's to prevent someone else from making it instead? RNA vaccines are actually not that hard to manufacture. They are actually easier than older peptide vaccines. Biohackers will be making them routinely in their garage in a few years.
https://www.economist.com/what... [economist.com]
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Funny thing, just a few weeks ago I was discussing with friends how the cost of DNA / RNA related equipment has dropped so much over the pass couple of decades that I will not be surprised if even now there are some reasonably well off bio hackers are playing with RNA stuff.
Too bad your link is behind a paywall and I can't see if the link leads to the same conclusions my discussion had.
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I believe that was AstraZenicas big project prior to the coronavirus striking town. The blood clotting thing from adenoviruses could be a dampner on that effort although shit, the rates are still so low (put it this way, asprins got a higher rate of dangero
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The blood clotting thing from adenoviruses could be a dampner on that effort
Is there also a possibility that we'll use up all our adenoviruses and adeno-associated viruses? How many are there?
Okay, I just googled it, and found this site [vectorbiolabs.com] claims AAVs provoke very little immune response. So my inference is that adenoviruses could get "used up", but that's less likely with AAVs. Though they have less room for the payload, so they may not be useful for some use cases.
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Hmm. Interesting. I hadn't thought about that. I must assume that when you use an adenovirus the body will produce antigens to that specific adenovirus. I dont know if thats a problem or not though?
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Say the virus makes the body produce antigens which it later learns to recognize and fight. That's the intended result, but the body will probably also learn to recognize the virus itself. So if that virus is used in another vaccine, the body will fight it off before it has a chance to produce the antigen it's supposed to.
NYT explains it better:
Many researchers focused their efforts on presenting the immune system with a protein found on the surface of the Ebola virus.
The gene for that protein was inserted into a different, harmless virus. When people received an injection of the vaccine, the harmless virus entered their cells; the cells then read the instructions in the Ebola gene and mass-produced Ebola’s surface protein. The immune system encountered the Ebola protein and made antibodies against it. And those antibodies protected the vaccinated people if they became infected with a full-blown Ebola virus.
This type of vaccine, called a viral vector vaccine, came with a big risk: The recipients might develop immunity to the viral vector after just the first dose. When the second dose arrived, their immune systems could swiftly wipe out the viral vector before it delivered its payload.
A number of vaccine makers decided to sidestep this potential threat by using different viruses for each dose. That way, the viral vectors in the second dose would be as new to the immune system as the first was. In 2017, for example, researchers at the Gamaleya Research Institute in Russia created an Ebola vaccine whose first dose contained a virus called an adenovirus. The second shot used another virus, called vesicular stomatitis virus.
When the Covid-19 pandemic began last year, the Gamaleya researchers used a similar strategy to create vaccines against the new coronavirus. The first dose used the same adenovirus as in their Ebola vaccine, called Ad5. The second dose contained a different human adenovirus, Ad26. The researches inserted a gene into both viruses for the protein on the surface of the coronavirus, called spike.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/0... [nytimes.com]
Re:Universal Flu Vaccine (Score:4, Insightful)
You remember right. That is a research goal.
Even if we can't get a universal one, I'm looking forward to being able to adapt a vaccine to the circulating strain in six weeks instead of six months. One superpower of the mRNA vaccines is turnaround so rapid we can get inside the virus's equivalent of an OODA loop.
60% is the best conventional flu vaccines do. One problem is they fall short of that peak most years. Even being able to hit 60% every year would save lives.
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That's not easy, but I believe they've been working on it.
Yep. For 50 years. Doing this is another 20 years away. We'll get to it right after we power up our fusion reactors which in turn will happen due to the discovery of the grand unifying theory.
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It's a lot easier now to find common DNA sequences in the flu virus, and now with mRNA vaccines, we can more directly train the immune system on the proteins they code. So it may be a long ways away, or it could be right around the corner.
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It's a lot easier now to find common DNA sequences in the flu virus, and now with mRNA vaccines, we can more directly train the immune system on the proteins they code. So it may be a long ways away, or it could be right around the corner.
Except that it only takes a slight difference for an immune system to not identify a virus which makes it almost impossible to train it in a general sense. For the record I really hope you're right, but I'm incredibly skeptical.
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... which is why you want to target a protein sequence that doesn't change much.
We have a whole lot of samples of influenza over the years, shouldn't be that difficult to find a few candidates.
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The problem there is ensuring you don't cause an autoimmune disease in the process. What separates viruses from many critical cells in the body is often the very things which make them each unique, at least that is how it was explained to me once. mRNA is a new technique we have in our toolkit, but it's hardly the only way to make a designer vaccine.
The other problem is the proteins which are the most visible to the body are the unique ones which is why even with COVID the target for the vaccine was the spi
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Influenza is specifically evolved to avoid that kind of thing. Maybe someone will figure out a clever method, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
Being able to manufacture custom vaccines quickly will make a huge difference though. Even better, you can make an mRNA vaccine that *anticipates* the direction flu strains are moving, unlike the live/killed vaccines where you actually need an active virus.
How sick does it make you? One or two shots? (Score:2)
If it requires two shots, and the second one means feeling like shit for three days -- this is worth it for a COVID-19 vaccine, but at least to me, not worth it for the flu. My chances of catching the flu in any given year are about 1 in 6 (from experience) so if that knocks me out for a week, but the vaccination process knocks me out for even two days, then I'm better off rolling the dice. Even the normal shot, which only makes me feel like shit for one day, I have considered optional in most years and pas
Re:How sick does it make you? One or two shots? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: How sick does it make you? One or two shots? (Score:2)
I turned into a newt after mine...
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Re: How sick does it make you? One or two shots? (Score:5, Funny)
Who says being a newt is *worse*, you insensitive clod!?
Re: How sick does it make you? One or two shots? (Score:3, Funny)
I just haven't figured out how to change my username to RightwingNewtjob...
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I got a sore arm (Score:2)
Still, beats the hell out of a double lung transplant [nydailynews.com].
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ya know what I don't understand? I haven't even thought about the flu in like 35 yrs. Basically since High School. Haven't had any vaccination, and haven't gotten sick either. I *did* get the Pfizer COVID vaccine tho. And the shingles shot.
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I've taken a flu shot every year for over 10 years. No more than a sore arm. I took two Shingrix shots in 2019, both took me down for 1 or 2 days. I took the AZ vaccine, first shot left me in bed for a day, 2nd shot, no more than a sore arm.
In spite of my ample experience, I'm not silly enough to attempt making a theory of it.
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my body is used to getting vaccinated and it made me have less of a reaction
I haven't had a vaccination in 40 years, and my level of reaction to the Pfizer vaccine was the same as yours. Looking at the data [cdc.gov] we have that reaction level in common with 50% of Pfizer recipients. Having regular vaccinations may not be the cause.
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More likely has to do with how much general crap your immune system is used to dealing with (and perhaps mostly from when you were a kid). Mine is used to dealing with a barnyard, as well as annual flu shots. I had zero reaction to the first Pfizer CV shot, mildly annoying fever from the 2nd (took aspirin and it went away). I never react to flu shots.
I did notice that after I'd had 4 or 5 variant flu vaccines, I stopped getting the flu altogether, even during a decade or so when I couldn't get the shot.
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Well, I've also gotten a flu shot every year since the bird flu, no ill effects whatsoever.
BUT. The first AZ vaccine shot did provide me with most of the range of side effects, which I felt for sth like 3 days. The second shot was no more than a sore arm and a headache for the day after.
Considering this reaction to the vaccine, I suspect I'd have had a strong reaction to a real infection, so... good thing I'm now fully vaccinated in case I encounter the real thing - Delta is making rounds...
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That's for yourself, but it matters who's around you.
If you're visiting your grandparents in the nursing home, for example, that changes the calculations.
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Agreed. But if I live only with someone who can (and generally does) get the vaccine, then the risk really is just to myself.
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That would be true if the vaccine's effectiveness were 100%, but it isn't, so it's false.
If whoever is around you considers it acceptable risk, that's one thing. Otherwise, that's bullshit.
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If it requires two shots, and the second one means feeling like shit for three days -- this is worth it for a COVID-19 vaccine, but at least to me, not worth it for the flu. My chances of catching the flu in any given year are about 1 in 6 (from experience) so if that knocks me out for a week, but the vaccination process knocks me out for even two days, then I'm better off rolling the dice.
Bear in mind that the reason the coronavirus vaccine gets a booster is so that it will provide lasting immunity. The flu mutates enough that having immunity beyond a year probably isn't useful anyway, assuming it isn't a universal vaccine, so instead of two days of sickness from the booster, you'd get two days of sickness if and when you get exposed to the actual virus (instead of a week). That's probably worth it.
Also, the advantage of an mRNA vaccine is that it might be possible to create a stronger imm
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If the now shots lasted more than a year, I'd be willing to put up with considerably more annoyance than with the annual shots. But if it's an annual thing, then I'm going to rate it on the same scale I rate the current vaccines. Right now the current vaccines are not worth it to me, but I will certainly concede they may improve enough that they become worthwhile.
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Probably zero for nearly all people. The overwhelming majority of people have little more than a muscle ache for a couple of hours. Getting sick from a vaccine is generally quite rare.
Bet it is tested better (Score:1)
Where's the flu/covid-booster combo shot? (Score:2)
The speed will help a lot (Score:1)
With less lead time, they'll only have to decide whether to inject you with Intel or AMD chips. (Assimilation likelihood: 50%. Are you Intel Inside?)
First humans got mRNA flu shots in 2015 (Score:2)
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Where does it say Moderna is claiming a 'first'? The only time the word 'first' appears in the article is that Moderna says it started a clinical trial of its vaccine and gave the shot to the first set of volunteers. Not the 'first time anyone got A mRNA flu vaccine', the 'first people to get THEIR flu vaccine'.
And why do we need a flu shot? (Score:4, Interesting)
With few exceptions distancing, masking, and staying at home when you're feeling unwell (now an acceptable work paradigm) seem to address the challenge of the flu.
So why the need for mass flu vaccinations? (Yes there is still a need for some people to get a shot just not the current scale of 'everyone needs to get a shot because flu season!'.)
Enough profit through fear mongering.
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In other words, why protect yourself (with a vaccine) when instead you can just hope everyone else does the right thing to protect you. No thanks.
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so what the reason besides fear mongering?
Well more fear mongering, did you think of that?
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With few exceptions distancing, masking, and staying at home when you're feeling unwell (now an acceptable work paradigm) seem to address the challenge of the flu.
So why the need for mass flu vaccinations? (Yes there is still a need for some people to get a shot just not the current scale of 'everyone needs to get a shot because flu season!'.)
Enough profit through fear mongering.
So given the choice of:
a) Annual partial-lockdowns.
b) Thousands/tens of thousands of flu deaths each year and a substantial portion of the general population being really sick for a week.
c) Everyone gets a flu shot.
You're choosing a and b ahead of c?
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You know a lot of people get flu shots, and they're fairly critical for old people in shared living conditions and people who work in hospitals, right?
The "everyone has to get one" is purely made up in your head.
cancer (Score:1)
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WAKE UP
https://www.nature.com/article... [nature.com]