Moderna vaccine shows promise against MPOX: study

Moderna vaccine shows promise against MPOX: study
Moderna
      vaccine
      shows
      promise
      against
      MPOX:
      study

An experimental vaccine from Moderna against MPOX has shown greater effectiveness than current vaccines in reducing symptoms and the duration of the disease, according to an animal study published Wednesday in the journal Cell.

This announcement comes as Africa is experiencing a resurgence of MPOX, which with the appearance of a new variant (1b) prompted the World Health Organization (WHO) to trigger its highest level of global health alert on August 14.

Researchers used mRNA technology to try to find a vaccine against Mpox that would be highly effective and safe, virologist and lead author of the study Jay Hooper of the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases told AFP.

Vaccines against MPOX, formerly known as monkeypox, were originally developed to combat human smallpox, a deadly disease that was declared eradicated by the WHO in 1980.

The vaccine currently marketed as Jynneos in the United States, Imvanex in Europe and Imvamune in Canada is composed of a “live attenuated” virus, which means that the virus has been weakened so that it cannot transmit the disease to humans.

But being attenuated, it is also less protective than the older generation vaccine ACAM2000, which is however not recommended for all audiences due to its side effects.

Moderna’s new mRNA vaccine includes genetic instructions that train the immune system to recognize four antigens that allow the virus to latch onto cells.

The American laboratory uses the same technology for its coronavirus vaccine, which is very safe and effective.

– Next tests on humans –

In this study, six macaques were vaccinated with the mRNA vaccine, and six others were injected with the currently marketed vaccine.

Eight weeks after the first injection, the 12 macaques were exposed to a deadly strain of mpox. Another group of six unvaccinated macaques was also exposed to the virus.

All vaccinated monkeys survived, regardless of the vaccine used, and five of the six unvaccinated macaques died.

“But if we focus specifically on the results of the mRNA vaccine, what we saw was very surprising and exciting,” Galit Alter, a virologist and immunologist at Moderna and another lead author of the study, told AFP.

Primates vaccinated with mRNA lost less weight and had fewer lesions than those injected with the attenuated vaccine.

In addition, the mRNA vaccine reduced the time during which lesions were visible on macaques by almost 10 days. Viral load in blood and throat swabs was also lower, suggesting that it also reduces the risk of transmission.

Alec Freyn of Moderna, another author of the study, told AFP that the vaccine had also been tested for other viruses in the same family and had been shown to be effective against cowpox, cowpox, and rabbitpox or camelpox.

The vaccine, called mRNA-1769, is now undergoing initial clinical trials in humans in the UK to ensure it is safe.

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