As the COVID-19 pandemic spreads around the world, researchers and
public health experts are casting about for older vaccines and antiviral
drugs that might be used to treat the disease caused by the novel
coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. The prime examples are malaria drugs chloroquine
and hydroxychloroquine, which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) approved for use under an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) this weekend, despite criticism of the lack of evidence they work.
Researchers in Australia are turning to another older treatment,
a vaccine once used to prevent tuberculosis (TB) called the bacillus
Calmette-Guerin (BCG), which has been used for about 100 years.
Researchers have been taking a hard look at BCG for some time for other
uses, including as an immunotherapy for early-stage bladder cancer.
And earlier this year, researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) conducted
research with the BCG to see if it could be used to improve TB
immunity. And now, in light of the way the BCG vaccine primes the immune
system, it is being evaluated for COVID-19, which has at least a couple
similarities to TB—they’re both lung infections caused by
microorganisms.
Nigel Curtis, head of infectious diseases research at the Murdoch
Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne, Australia, is running a
study into BCG and COVID-19, which the World Health Organization (WHO)
is encouraging other researchers to collaborate with.
“It can boost the immune system so that it defends better against a
whole range of different infections, a whole range of different viruses
and bacteria in a lot more generalized way,” said Curtis, who is also a
professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of
Melbourne and head of the infectious diseases unit at the city’s Royal
Children’s Hospital.
In Curtis’s study, which will run six months, 4,000 healthcare
workers will be vaccinated with BCG with the seasonal influenza vaccine
or the influenza vaccine alone. A placebo vaccine isn’t being used
because the BCG shot usually causes a localized skin reaction that
leaves a scar.
Similar studies are ongoing in The Netherlands and Curtis indicated
he is in talks with possible trial sites in Boston and in other
Australian cities.
BCG is used to immunize about 130 million newborns around the globe
each year. Research in babies in Africa demonstrated that BCG offers
protections against TB and other pediatric infections.
“We need to think of every possible way that we can protect
healthcare workers,” Curtis said. “And there’s going to be a particular
need to reduce the amount of time that our healthcare workers are
absent.”
He also added, “We wouldn’t be doing this if we didn’t think that
this might work. We cannot guarantee that this will work. And of course,
the only way to find out is with our trial.”
The BCG vaccine contains a live, weakened strain of Mycobacterium bovis, which is very similar to the microbe that causes tuberculosis.
Results from the trial, which will begin dosing
on April 6, aren’t likely until September. Meanwhile, researchers
worldwide are testing other drugs to respond to the pandemic, with over
100 ongoing clinical trials.
“I am hopeful that within three months we will have a good idea which
drugs are good and which drugs are bad,” Australian National University
geneticist Gaetan Burgio told the Asia Times. “The field is moving very quickly.”
https://www.biospace.com/article/-can-an-old-tuberculosis-vaccine-work-against-covid-19-/
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