As India recorded more than 3.5
mn COVID- 19 cases by August end, climbing to the third position in the world
after the US and Brazil, and perhaps, as Dr Ashish Jha, Director of Harvard’s
Global Health Institute, commented, is on the path to record more cases than
any other place in the world, there came some good news to cheer us up: at last
the second phase of the clinical trial of the much-awaited University of Oxford
COVID-19 vaccine commenced in Pune on 26 August. Two volunteers aged 32 and 48
were administered the first shots of the Covishield – 0.5 ml dose – at
Bharati Vidyapeeth Medical College and Hospital at around 1pm and were
discharged after half-an-hour of administering the vaccine. The hospital
authorities also said that a second dose will be given to these two volunteers
after 28 days. Then they will finally be examined after 180 days for
ascertaining whether the vaccine is successful or not.
This is how a vaccine is usually evaluated
during its development phase: it should
go through three phases of rigorous experimental testing on human beings, which
are commonly known as clinical trials, to judge its safety and efficacy. Phase
I is the first study of safety: it is carried out with an average sample size
of less than 100 people to find the acceptable level of the dose of vaccine which
will not cause serious side-effects. In Phase II, safety and efficacy are
tested together with a sample size of a few hundred people. Then the so identified effective and safe
doses are passed on to Phase III testing. It is a detailed evaluation of
effectiveness of vaccine in comparison with some existing treatment or in its
absence, some such similar looking treatment having no effect, usually called
Placebo, carried out on a few thousands of people. Once administered, these
people are tracked over months to determine whether the people receiving
vaccine get infected less than the people who were given placebo (control lot).
This phase of study also affords scientists to check for side-effects if any
that they could have missed to notice in the earlier phases involving small
sample sizes. It is only after the Phase III trial that the vaccine, if found
safe and effective, is recommended to regulatory authorities for release for
massive use. It is against this background that scientists from the west including
Sir Patrick Vallance of UK, Anthony Fauci of the US and even WHO repeatedly
said that a vaccine is not expected before 12-18 months.
In this context, it is also essential
to bear in mind that RNA viruses are widely known for frequent mutations. It is
reported that about 10 lineages or subtypes have already evolved from the
original Wuhan virus type. As per the revised nomenclature, the prominent subtypes
are identified as: 19A, 19B, 20A, 20B and 20C. A defining mutation of former
A2a lineage was: D614G. It means that in the new lineage, D614G, there is an
amino acid substitution at the 614th position in the viral sequence
from aspartic acid in the pre-existing lineage to glycine. This mutant is
reported to be a super-rapid spreader. It is also reported that this mutant,
transmitting itself very efficiently, outcompeted and replaced all other
lineages in Europe and North America. It however, could not get such a hold in
East Asia.
It is further reported that all
the lineages evolved in 2020 – 20A, 20B, 20C – have this D614G mutation. These
lineages are now reported to have become dominant across India. However, it is still
not known if there is any impact of this mutation on the functional
characteristics of the virus. It is also
reported that no credible evidence was noticed to say that these different
lineages have any differences in their mortality rates. In fact, according to Dr
Partha Majumder, President, Indian Academy of Sciences, “all of the lineages
are roughly similar in their ability to cause death upon infecting a host [man].”
A similar view has been expressed
by Dr Mishra, Director of Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, who says,
“though Covid-19 virus is mutating, there is no evidence yet to show the mutant
as “bad or worse” and hence “so far there has been no threat to vaccine
making”.
As per Dr Majumdar, there is no
credible data to show that temperature, humidity and other such environmental
factors have any impact on transmissibility of the virus. He further added that
he is not aware if any epidemiological study was carried out with large sample
size that has provided evidence to the effect that the mortality rate in India
is lower than in other large geographical regions. He however, agreed that
prior exposure to other coronaviruses and related viruses can have an impact on
lowering the infection rates but he is not sure if it has any impact on
mortality. It is perhaps, keeping all this
in view that he said in an interview to The
Hindu that to be successful in arresting the spread of novel Coronavirus, “a
vaccine must be efficacious to protect the recipients against the entire
diversity of the virus.”
Now coming back to the likely
date when the vaccine will be available, it becomes clear from what the medical
college and hospital in Pune that commenced the second phase of trail said that
it may take six more months to know the final outcome. Here it would be worth
recalling what Dr Mishra of CCMB said: it is not good to raise hopes of the
people “too much” when the vaccine is months away and “we do not know if there
is going to be one.”
Importantly, we all also must
remember the categorical statement Dr Mishra made in the said virtual meet on
RSTV: “For now, we have to manage the pandemic without drugs or vaccine. We do
not yet fully understand how the virus affects the body, but we do know how it
spreads from person to person” and hence for the present, “the effective
vaccine continues to be social distancing, masks and hand hygiene” and he was
hopeful that “we will win the war with these measures.”
There is yet another disturbing
feature which was reported in June that merits our attention: the antibodies of SARS- CoV-2 produced in the
body of an infected person may last only for 2-3 months after infection. That
means, the vaccine might also do the same thing. Recent reports also indicate
that people are getting re-infected with the virus, may be of a different
lineage. The very recent reports about a repeat infection from Hong Kong and
the US is perhaps a silent pointer towards this phenomenon or infection of a
mutant – sub-type (?).
So, let us remember what we know
for sure and ardently practice it: wear a mask properly covering mouth and
nose, maintain social distancing and practice good personal hygiene,
particularly, hand hygiene. And that’s the only way to stay Sthiram and Sukham,
for now, before a vaccine, if any, arrives!
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