Here is an article in today's NY Times. I'm not sure I entirely understand
what the authors are saying, but it seems to be that one can acquire and
pass on a pathogen without getting sick oneself and that a more efficient
approach as far as developing a vaccine would be to not only prevent the
individual from getting sick but prevent her or him from passing on the
pathogen. What I don't entirely understand is how a person can get infected
and have the pathogen grow in sufficient numbers to be passed on without
making the individual sick. Maybe somebody else can explain. Here's the
text of the article:

Are We Looking for the Wrong Coronavirus Vaccines?

The best vaccines don’t just prevent a disease; they also prevent the
pathogen causing the disease from being transmitted. So why aren’t we
focusing more on those?
By Adam Finn and Richard Malley
Dr. Finn and Dr. Malley are physicians specializing in infectious diseases
and vaccinology.

Aug. 24, 2020, 5:01 a.m. ET

Not long after the new coronavirus first surfaced last December, an
ambitious prediction was made: A vaccine would be available within 12 to 18
months, and it would stop the pandemic.

Despite serious challenges — how to mass manufacture, supply and deliver a
vaccine worldwide — the first prong of that wish could well be fulfilled.
Eight vaccine candidates are undergoing large-scale efficacy tests,
so-called Phase 3 trials, and results are expected by the end of this year
or early 2021.

But even if one, or more, of those efforts succeeds, a vaccine might not
end the pandemic. This is partly because we seem to be focused at the
moment on developing the kind of vaccine that may well prevent Covid-19,
the disease, but that wouldn’t do enough to stop the transmission of
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

Doctors usually explain vaccines to patients and the parents of young
children by describing how those protect us from a particular disease: An
attenuated form of a pathogen, or just a bit of it, is inoculated into the
human body in order to trigger its immune response; having learned to fight
off that pathogen once, the body will remember how to fend off the disease
should it be exposed to the same pathogen later.

A vaccine’s ability to forestall a disease is also how vaccine developers
typically design — and how regulators typically evaluate — Phase 3 clinical
trials for vaccine candidates.

Yet the best vaccines also serve another, critical, function: They block a
pathogen’s transmission from one person to another. And this result, often
called an “indirect” effect of vaccination, is no less important than the
direct effect of preventing the disease caused by that pathogen. In fact,
during a pandemic, it probably is even more important.

That’s what we should be focusing on right now. And yet we are not.

Stopping a virus’s transmission reduces the entire population’s overall
exposure to the virus. It protects people who may be too frail to respond
to a vaccine, who do not have access to the vaccine, who refuse to be
immunized and whose immune response might wane over time.

The benefits of this approach have been demonstrated with other pathogens
and other diseases.

The Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) conjugate vaccines were designed,
and licensed in the early 1990s, to prevent young children from developing
serious infections such as meningitis. Soon enough an unexpected and
welcome side benefit became clear: The vaccine interrupted the bacterium’s
transmission; after its introduction, occurrences of the disease dropped
also in groups that had not been vaccinated.

The human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines were developed to prevent cervical
cancer and genital warts in women. They have proved immensely effective
among the women to whom they are administered — and up to 50 percent
effective at preventing genital warts among unvaccinated men, according to
a 2017 study of the health insurance records for 2005-10 of some nine
million people in Germany.

To understand why this is the case, remember what it takes for you to
become ill from a pathogen, be it a virus or a bacterium.

First, you are exposed to it. Then it infects you. While you are infected,
you may infect others. In some cases, the infection develops into a
disease. In other cases, it doesn’t: Though infected, you remain
asymptomatic.

One way that vaccines can interrupt a pathogen’s transmission cycle is by
preventing the pathogen from causing an infection in the first place. This
is how many common vaccines — against measles, mumps, rubella and
chickenpox — operate.

Other vaccines — like the ones against meningococcal meningitis or
pneumonia brought on by the pneumococcus bacterium — can block the
transmission of the pathogen by interfering with the infection or by
decreasing either the quantity of pathogen that the infected patient sheds
or the duration of the shedding period.

Some recipients of the pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine simply don’t get
infected with the bacterium; others do get infected and carry the bacterium
in their nose, but in smaller amounts and for shorter periods of time than
if they had not been vaccinated.

Much still needs to be learned about precisely how such mechanisms work —
what part do antibodies play? T cells? — but the upshot from these examples
is this: Vaccines can block the transmission of viruses or bacteria, and
they can do so in several ways.

Given the communitywide benefits of accomplishing that, especially in a
pandemic, current vaccine-development efforts should prioritize finding
vaccines that limit the transmission of SARS-CoV-2.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has stated that preventing a
SARS-CoV-2 infection is in itself a sufficient endpoint for the Phase 3
trials of vaccine candidates — that it is an acceptable alternative goal to
preventing the development of Covid-19. The World Health Organization has
said that “shedding/transmission” is as well.

These guidelines are an important signal, especially considering that the
F.D.A. has never approved a vaccine based on its effects on infection
alone; instead, the agency has focused exclusively on the vaccine’s
effectiveness at disease prevention.

And yet vaccine developers do not seem to be heeding this new call.

Based on our review of the Phase 3 tests listed at ClinicalTrials.gov, a
database of trials conducted around the world, the primary goal in each of
these studies is to reduce the occurrence of Covid-19.

Four of the six Covid-19 vaccine trials for which information is available
say they will also evaluate the incidence of SARS-CoV-2 infections among
subjects — but only as an ancillary outcome.

This approach is shortsighted: One cannot assume that a vaccine that
prevents the development of Covid-19 in a patient will necessarily also
limit the risk that the patient will transmit SARS-CoV-2 to other people.

For example, a study of young Australian teenagers published in the New
England Journal of Medicine early this year found that the vaccine used to
prevent the diseases caused by the B strain of meningococcus in children
and teenagers “had no discernible effect” on the presence of the relevant
bacterium in the throats of vaccinated subjects displaying no symptoms.

The inactivated polio vaccine prevalent in many developed countries today,
known as IPV, is highly effective at protecting individuals against polio.
But it is far less effective at reducing viral shedding, at least in fecal
excretions, than the oral vaccine, known as OPV, used more widely in other
parts of the world.

In the late 1990s, the United States, like other wealthy countries,
replaced with an acellular vaccine the killed-whole-cell pertussis vaccine
it had previously used against whooping cough. A resurgence of whooping
cough already was underway, but it accelerated then: Although the new
vaccine was better than the previous one at protecting the inoculated from
the disease, it was less good at blocking transmission of the bacterium
that causes the cough.

Conversely, a vaccine that, let’s say, offers older adults only modest
protection against developing a disease might nonetheless be very
effective, when administered to healthy adults or children, at curbing a
pathogen’s transmission in a population overall.

This is the case with the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. A 2015 study
published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that the vaccine
reduced the occurrence of pneumonia in inoculated adults age 65 or older by
only about 45 percent. Yet, according to a study last year by researchers
at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Stanford University,
the immunization of infants and toddlers reduced ninefold the incidence of
pneumococcal disease in the elderly.

With some vaccines, for some diseases, the indirect benefits of vaccination
can be greater than the direct effects.

Based on these precedents, it could be a grave mistake for vaccine
developers now to hew only, or too closely, to the single-minded goal of
preventing Covid-19, the disease.

Doing so could mean privileging vaccines that don’t block the transmission
of SARS-CoV-2 at all, or abandoning vaccines that block transmission well
enough but that, by prevailing standards, are deemed to not forestall
enough the development of Covid-19.

That, in turn, would essentially mean that the only way to ever get rid of
SARS-CoV-2 would be near-universal immunization — a herculean task.

Focusing on how to block the coronavirus’s transmission is a much more
efficient approach.

This is why randomized controlled trials of the vaccines currently under
consideration should include regular monitoring for the presence of
SARS-CoV-2 in study subjects. The goal should be to evaluate whether the
subjects acquire the infection at all, and for how long, as well as how
abundantly they shed and spread the virus, when and how.

Studying these issues could also help cast a light on the role of so-called
superspreading events in this pandemic.

More and more research suggests that a very small number of instances —
gatherings at restaurants or bars, choir rehearsal, funerals, church
services — might account for a vast majority of the cases of infection
overall.

But the discussion about those instances has tended to focus on their
settings and circumstances, such as the presence of crowds in confined
spaces for extended periods of time.

Yet the question of whether some infected individuals, perhaps especially
at certain stages of infection, are particularly infectious — whether they,
themselves, are superspreaders — also needs to be studied head-on: When
does contagiousness peak in whom and why? And can vaccines modify any of
that?

The best vaccines don’t just protect the inoculated from getting sick from
a disease. They also protect everyone else from even contracting the
pathogen that causes that disease.

Preventing the very transmission of SARS-CoV-2, no less than stopping it
from turning into Covid-19, should be a main priority of current efforts to
develop the vaccines to end this pandemic.

Adam Finn (@adamhfinn) is a senior clinician in the pediatric immunology
and infectious diseases clinical service at Bristol Royal Hospital for
Children and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Bristol.
Richard Malley (@rickmalley) is a physician specializing in infectious
diseases at Boston Children’s Hospital and a professor of pediatrics at
Harvard Medical School.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/opinion/coronavirus-vaccine-prevention.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage

-- 
*“Science and socialism go hand-in-hand.” *Felicity Dowling
Check out:https:http://oaklandsocialist.com also on Facebook

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