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The worst version' of COVID is spreading. Can we update our vaccines in time?

SBFNews

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'The worst version' of COVID is spreading. Can we update our vaccines in time?
www.yahoo.com

Andrew Romano ·West Coast Correspondent
Thu, June 30, 2022, 9:19 PM·7 min read

9b0dd130-ee6e-11ec-afdd-ae52a96435f8


For the last 18 months, the original COVID-19 vaccines — first as a two-dose series, then as boosters — have done an extraordinary job shielding us from illness, hospitalization and death. Globally, they saved nearly 20 million lives in 2021 alone. Even today, unvaccinated Americans are twice as likely as vaccinated Americans to test positive for COVID — and six times as likely to die from the disease.

But viruses evolve, and vaccines should too.

That was the big-picture takeaway from a pivotal meeting this week of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s expert advisory panel. The question before them was simple: Ahead of an expected winter surge, should vaccine manufacturers tweak their forthcoming booster shots to target Omicron — the ultra-infectious variant that has spent the last seven months surging throughout the world in one form or another — or should they stick with the tried-and-true 2020 recipe?

The panel voted 19-2 on Tuesday in favor of Omicron boosters. The question now, however, is which version of Omicron the next round of shots should target.

A health worker administers a dose of a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.

For anyone who hasn’t been paying attention, the Omicron strain that triggered last winter’s massive COVID wave (BA.1) is now extinct. In March, it was supplanted by the even more transmissible BA.2 … which was supplanted in May by the even more transmissible BA.2.12.1 … which is now being supplanted by the (you guessed it) even more transmissible BA.4 and BA.5.

Experts say BA.5 is the one to worry about: “The worst version of the virus that we’ve seen,” as Dr. Eric Topol, the founder of Scripps Research Translational Institute, recently put it. Together, the closely related BA.4 and BA.5 now account for the majority of new U.S. COVID cases, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — but BA.5 (36.6%) is spreading a lot faster than BA.4 (15.7%). By early July, it will be the dominant strain in the U.S.

That’s troublesome for several reasons. To our immune system, the distance from BA.1 to heavily mutated BA.4 and BA.5 is “far greater,” Topol writes, than the distance from the original BA.1 virus to previous blockbuster variants such as Alpha and Delta — which makes them harder to recognize and respond to. According to the latest research, that could mean:

None of this will set the U.S. back to square one. Despite elevated case levels, there are now fewer U.S. COVID patients in intensive care units than there were during previous phases of the pandemic, and the national death rate (about 300-400 per day) is near the all-time low. Acquired immunity, multiple rounds of vaccination and improved treatment options are helping — a lot.

But combined with waning vaccine protection and disappointing booster uptake among the elderly, the virus’s accelerating evolution and aggressive new trajectory — toward greater transmissibility, evasiveness and possibly pathogenicity — could cause significant reinfections and disruptions if not addressed.

It could also endanger vulnerable Americans in the months ahead.

A person wearing a mask walks by a sign in New York City outlining the CDC’s guidelines to control the spread of COVID.

In late April, BA.5 hit Portugal; by June, more Portuguese people were dying of COVID each day than during the country’s winter Omicron peak. To be sure, Portugal has a larger senior population (23%) than the U.S. (16%), but not by much. And the vaccination rate there is 87%, compared to just 67% in America. Portugal’s booster rate, meanwhile, is nearly twice as high as ours. Infection and hospitalization rates are now rising across much of the rest of Europe as well.

At Tuesday’s FDA advisory meeting, Justin Lessler, an epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, presented a series of projections about how the virus could affect the U.S. in the months ahead. The most optimistic scenario? About 95,000 new deaths between March 2022 and March 2023. The most pessimistic? More than 200,000.

So given that BA.5 — which, again, is outcompeting its cousin BA.4 — will soon be everywhere, it seems logical that the next version of the vaccine should be tailored to fight it.

Yet that hasn’t necessarily been the plan. Both Pfizer and Moderna have already launched clinical trials for redesigned fall boosters … but those boosters are optimized to counter the now-nonexistent BA.1 rather than the soon-to-be-dominant BA.5. According to data presented Tuesday by Pfizer, their existing BA.1 booster generated a significantly lower level of neutralizing antibodies against BA.4 and BA.5 than against BA.1.

Vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are prepared for packaging.

Yet in mice, at least, a booster containing BA.4 and BA.5 produced a higher neutralizing response to all Omicron variants (including BA.4 and BA.5) than the original vaccine.

Despite concerns about “scant” data about whether bivalent boosters (equal parts original strain and Omicron) work better than monovalent boosters (100% Omicron), and about whether it’s worth waiting for Novavax’s promising non-mRNA vaccine to hit the market, the panel mostly agreed that BA.4/BA.5 boosters make sense. The FDA is leaning that way as well. Pfizer said it was “prepared” to deliver the new boosters by the first week of October; Moderna, by the last week of October or early November — “assuming no clinical data requirements.”

That means no human trials — just animal trials and laboratory tests. That might sound scary to some, but regulators already use the same accelerated process to update the flu vaccine each year — and there is no mechanism by which minor mRNA tweaks will make revised Pfizer and Moderna shots any less safe than the billions of doses administered so far worldwide. Otherwise, the U.S. will miss its fall-winter deadline, and the fast-evolving virus will continue to outrun the vaccines.

The FDA itself will decide “very rapidly” what to recommend; manufacturers will follow their lead.

A syringe is prepared with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.

In the future, chasing variants may not prove to be the most effective or efficient approach to COVID vaccination. As Topol put it, “by the time a BA.5 vaccine booster is potentially available, who knows what … the predominant strain” will be? That’s why it was welcome news Wednesday when Pfizer and BioNTech announced that they plan to “start tests on humans of next-generation shots that protect against a wide variety of coronaviruses in the second half of the year,” according to a Reuters report.

These include “T-cell-enhancing shots, designed to primarily protect against severe disease if the virus becomes more dangerous,” and “pan-coronavirus shots that protect against the broader family of viruses and its mutations.” Nasal vaccines meant to stop infection before it starts are promising as well.

But those are all longer-term propositions. This year, at least, a BA.5 booster is probably our best bet to minimize infection, illness and death during another likely winter surge.

“I fully expect further evolution to occur in the coming months, but that this evolution will most likely be on top of BA.4/BA.5 — and so [it] shouldn’t dissuade vaccine updates,” virologist Trevor Bedford of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle wrote earlier this week. “I believe that the decision making process can be boiled down to: of vaccine compositions that can be manufactured in time for fall distribution, which do we expect to generate the highest [protection] against BA.4/BA.5?”
 

SBFNews

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Top NY Doctor: New COVID Wave Is Starting, With the ‘Worst Version' of Omicron​

The BA.5 subvariant of the omicron variant of COVID-19 appears to be on the rise in New York City and fueling a possible sixth wave of the pandemic​

Published June 28, 2022 • Updated on June 29, 2022 at 10:21 am​


A new COVID wave appears to be starting in New York City, fueled by the strongest subvariant of the omicron strain of coronavirus to date, one of the city's top epidemiologists said Tuesday.

The BA.5 subvariant, first seen in South Africa and then Portugal, is considered by some experts to be the "worst version" of omicron seen yet, given its apparent capacity to escape prior immunity and transmit more readily.

Dr. Jay Varma, a Weill Cornell epidemiologist and formerly then-mayor Bill de Blasio's top public health advisor during the pandemic, said infections appear to have stabilized at a high level in the city, rather than dropping.

"The decline of reported #COVID19 cases in NYC has stopped. Reported cases are at a high plateau, which means actual transmission is very high when you account for the >20x under-counting. This is likely the beginning of a BA.5 wave," Varma tweeted.

Transmission rates in the city hit two-month lows last week, but have started to tick up since then. The health department's own testing says BA.5 accounts for 17% of infections, but that data is almost two weeks old now. Nationally, CDC data pegs BA.5 at nearly 37% of cases.

"Experience from other countries means there will be another big increase in NYC #COVID19 infections, including among those who have had #Omicron in past few months," Varma went on to add.

He did note that it's still unclear what a BA.5 wave would mean for hospitalizations and deaths. Citywide COVID hospitalizations and deaths have been falling steadily and are at two-month lows.

The question now, he said, is whether boosters that worked against the BA.1 subvariant six months ago will have any effect against BA.5.
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Why does it feel like somebody is behind all this new variants emerging ?
Moi think it is just like those anti-virus software companies needing to create new viruses in order to stay afloat.
 

Willamshakespear

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is always good to be prepared ( and cover one's own rear for personal survival or political reasons, more so in US where legislator elections are due ). Viruses will eventually evolve OVER TIME, not OVERNITE, BUT it still have to OBEY the law of physics & science. The virus genome's growth can only grow over time, thru Natural Selection - of the best survive, & the failures, to die out.

COVid 19 is only an evolution of the flu virus that had existed LONG even before Humankind existed on Earth, based upon historical records & archeology findings, even in the ice cores from Antarctica. It's strength lays in the SPIKE proteins, which are capable to latch onto Human cells & inject the virus into it. It is also its weakness, as our modern scientific advancement in vaccine use, had been ABLE to teach our Human Immune System to identify, isolate & destroy the virus thru its spike proteins.

As with natural selection, it can only attempt to grow MORE spikes, per NANO square surface on the virus cell itself, to have MORE opportunities to attack the Human cell. That is what it's genes can ONLY do, & in layman terms, to be more contagious. After 2 yrs of foolish lockdowns & restrictions that almost STARVE civilization, Humanity finally found out that MOST - 98% of infected have no or only mild symptoms, but only the elderly, those with existing health conditions & those whom born with defects are affected, as their own individual immune system is weakened & thus easily susceptible to the virus per second replicative swarms.

None will be left behind, more so in Singapore. Everyday, researchers are finding ways to prolong & save life of everyone, thru hygiene education & better vaccines. However, life must go on, with courage & hope. COVid 19 variations study is good & often only purely academic, but it must never affect our scientifically & med advanced knowledge that improved our way of life to treat it as endemic, than to live in hiding & fear, & be starved to death over events that no mortal has control over.
 
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congo9

Alfrescian
Loyal
During these 2 years, I have experience life is really transient. We should be happy and make your environment and the people beside you live better. That's the whole point in life. As for yourself, leave it to lord almighty.

He make you happy..
 

congo9

Alfrescian
Loyal
It's of no use worrying about things and matter outside ones control. The outcome will always be Imperfect. What matter is you yourself and the person beside you or the person you have love.
 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
The emergency approved but still is indeed trial vaccines couldn't kill the virus but those vaccinated becomes super-spreaders as stated by our own 'experts' and MSM. It's also now more immune to the vaccines that's why you need more boosters while that means compromising your own natural immunity. Now you can't even fight the evolved more infectious but lesser lethal strains.

All viruses evolve to be more infectious but milder over time that's nature or mankind would have been extinct long ago. :rolleyes: Don't get me wrong it's a good thing. Obi good ! :thumbsup:

Only the smartest and strongest need to survive that's nature too. :roflmao: lol.........


Read this :

Singapore: the latest coronavirus counts, charts and maps

https://graphics.reuters.com › countries-and-territories
There have been 1,425,171 infections and 1,410 coronavirus-related deaths reported in the country since the pandemic began.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________



So what happened to those 53,000 who refused and were
not allowed to go back to work in the office did all of them died ? Check above ! Only 1,410 total cuntry deaths since the pandemic not to mention 99% are with 'underlying' conditions, remember ? lol...................
 
Last edited:

red amoeba

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I felt the world has been more peaceful during the last two years of lock down. Miss those days.
When the fuckers sit up and admit that vaccine is useless ?
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I call this the 'US midterm election' variant. :wink:

By the way, Fauci got his second booster, and consumed the Pfizer Covid pills. He tested positive again. Trust the science! :biggrin:
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
I call this the 'US midterm election' variant. :wink:

By the way, Fauci got his second booster, and consumed the Pfizer Covid pills. He tested positive again. Trust the science! :biggrin:
He is soo lucky that he did not suffer from the side effects of the vaccine. Or was he just injected with a saline solution as touted by the conspiracy theorists?
 

Flying Horse

Alfrescian
Loyal
'The worst version' of COVID is spreading. Can we update our vaccines in time?
www.yahoo.com

Andrew Romano ·West Coast Correspondent
Thu, June 30, 2022, 9:19 PM·7 min read

9b0dd130-ee6e-11ec-afdd-ae52a96435f8


For the last 18 months, the original COVID-19 vaccines — first as a two-dose series, then as boosters — have done an extraordinary job shielding us from illness, hospitalization and death. Globally, they saved nearly 20 million lives in 2021 alone. Even today, unvaccinated Americans are twice as likely as vaccinated Americans to test positive for COVID — and six times as likely to die from the disease.

But viruses evolve, and vaccines should too.

That was the big-picture takeaway from a pivotal meeting this week of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s expert advisory panel. The question before them was simple: Ahead of an expected winter surge, should vaccine manufacturers tweak their forthcoming booster shots to target Omicron — the ultra-infectious variant that has spent the last seven months surging throughout the world in one form or another — or should they stick with the tried-and-true 2020 recipe?

The panel voted 19-2 on Tuesday in favor of Omicron boosters. The question now, however, is which version of Omicron the next round of shots should target.

A health worker administers a dose of a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.

For anyone who hasn’t been paying attention, the Omicron strain that triggered last winter’s massive COVID wave (BA.1) is now extinct. In March, it was supplanted by the even more transmissible BA.2 … which was supplanted in May by the even more transmissible BA.2.12.1 … which is now being supplanted by the (you guessed it) even more transmissible BA.4 and BA.5.

Experts say BA.5 is the one to worry about: “The worst version of the virus that we’ve seen,” as Dr. Eric Topol, the founder of Scripps Research Translational Institute, recently put it. Together, the closely related BA.4 and BA.5 now account for the majority of new U.S. COVID cases, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — but BA.5 (36.6%) is spreading a lot faster than BA.4 (15.7%). By early July, it will be the dominant strain in the U.S.

That’s troublesome for several reasons. To our immune system, the distance from BA.1 to heavily mutated BA.4 and BA.5 is “far greater,” Topol writes, than the distance from the original BA.1 virus to previous blockbuster variants such as Alpha and Delta — which makes them harder to recognize and respond to. According to the latest research, that could mean:

None of this will set the U.S. back to square one. Despite elevated case levels, there are now fewer U.S. COVID patients in intensive care units than there were during previous phases of the pandemic, and the national death rate (about 300-400 per day) is near the all-time low. Acquired immunity, multiple rounds of vaccination and improved treatment options are helping — a lot.

But combined with waning vaccine protection and disappointing booster uptake among the elderly, the virus’s accelerating evolution and aggressive new trajectory — toward greater transmissibility, evasiveness and possibly pathogenicity — could cause significant reinfections and disruptions if not addressed.

It could also endanger vulnerable Americans in the months ahead.

A person wearing a mask walks by a sign in New York City outlining the CDC’s guidelines to control the spread of COVID.

In late April, BA.5 hit Portugal; by June, more Portuguese people were dying of COVID each day than during the country’s winter Omicron peak. To be sure, Portugal has a larger senior population (23%) than the U.S. (16%), but not by much. And the vaccination rate there is 87%, compared to just 67% in America. Portugal’s booster rate, meanwhile, is nearly twice as high as ours. Infection and hospitalization rates are now rising across much of the rest of Europe as well.

At Tuesday’s FDA advisory meeting, Justin Lessler, an epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, presented a series of projections about how the virus could affect the U.S. in the months ahead. The most optimistic scenario? About 95,000 new deaths between March 2022 and March 2023. The most pessimistic? More than 200,000.

So given that BA.5 — which, again, is outcompeting its cousin BA.4 — will soon be everywhere, it seems logical that the next version of the vaccine should be tailored to fight it.

Yet that hasn’t necessarily been the plan. Both Pfizer and Moderna have already launched clinical trials for redesigned fall boosters … but those boosters are optimized to counter the now-nonexistent BA.1 rather than the soon-to-be-dominant BA.5. According to data presented Tuesday by Pfizer, their existing BA.1 booster generated a significantly lower level of neutralizing antibodies against BA.4 and BA.5 than against BA.1.

Vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are prepared for packaging.

Yet in mice, at least, a booster containing BA.4 and BA.5 produced a higher neutralizing response to all Omicron variants (including BA.4 and BA.5) than the original vaccine.

Despite concerns about “scant” data about whether bivalent boosters (equal parts original strain and Omicron) work better than monovalent boosters (100% Omicron), and about whether it’s worth waiting for Novavax’s promising non-mRNA vaccine to hit the market, the panel mostly agreed that BA.4/BA.5 boosters make sense. The FDA is leaning that way as well. Pfizer said it was “prepared” to deliver the new boosters by the first week of October; Moderna, by the last week of October or early November — “assuming no clinical data requirements.”

That means no human trials — just animal trials and laboratory tests. That might sound scary to some, but regulators already use the same accelerated process to update the flu vaccine each year — and there is no mechanism by which minor mRNA tweaks will make revised Pfizer and Moderna shots any less safe than the billions of doses administered so far worldwide. Otherwise, the U.S. will miss its fall-winter deadline, and the fast-evolving virus will continue to outrun the vaccines.

The FDA itself will decide “very rapidly” what to recommend; manufacturers will follow their lead.

A syringe is prepared with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.

In the future, chasing variants may not prove to be the most effective or efficient approach to COVID vaccination. As Topol put it, “by the time a BA.5 vaccine booster is potentially available, who knows what … the predominant strain” will be? That’s why it was welcome news Wednesday when Pfizer and BioNTech announced that they plan to “start tests on humans of next-generation shots that protect against a wide variety of coronaviruses in the second half of the year,” according to a Reuters report.

These include “T-cell-enhancing shots, designed to primarily protect against severe disease if the virus becomes more dangerous,” and “pan-coronavirus shots that protect against the broader family of viruses and its mutations.” Nasal vaccines meant to stop infection before it starts are promising as well.

But those are all longer-term propositions. This year, at least, a BA.5 booster is probably our best bet to minimize infection, illness and death during another likely winter surge.

“I fully expect further evolution to occur in the coming months, but that this evolution will most likely be on top of BA.4/BA.5 — and so [it] shouldn’t dissuade vaccine updates,” virologist Trevor Bedford of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle wrote earlier this week. “I believe that the decision making process can be boiled down to: of vaccine compositions that can be manufactured in time for fall distribution, which do we expect to generate the highest [protection] against BA.4/BA.5?”
Just look at other parts of the world where no Covid tale spinning mainstream media can ever penetrate. Mostly poor countries where people ar too busy with making ends meet.
UN-MASKED
UN-PCR-TESTED
UN-JABBED
UN-AFRAID
 

Flying Horse

Alfrescian
Loyal
I call this the 'US midterm election' variant. :wink:

By the way, Fauci got his second booster, and consumed the Pfizer Covid pills. He tested positive again. Trust the science! :biggrin:
That old sly Covidian Cult high priest, Fauci selling snake-oil and now bitten by the snake again and again. Well if the snake venom doesn't kill him, it just proves that the snake he play in this Show is quite harmless.
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
During these 2 years, I have experience life is really transient. We should be happy and make your environment and the people beside you live better. That's the whole point in life. As for yourself, leave it to lord almighty.

He make you happy..
Jesus is dangerous and this Jesus must die.... still want to depend on fake lord.... or the other ahneh named Bud-dah.... who sit under banyan tree all day long... stating the obvious to the poor.... and ask for charity from the rich.... when hungry go beg for food...





This is what happen begging for food, if it is not a sin city.... lazy people...


 
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