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Monday, August 16, 2021

Grim warning from Israel: Vaccination blunts, but does not defeat Delta

 “Now is a critical time,” Israeli Minister of Health Nitzan Horowitz said as the 56-year-old got a COVID-19 booster shot on 13 August, the day his country became the first nation to offer a third dose of vaccine to people as young as age 50. “We’re in a race against the pandemic.”

His message was meant for his fellow Israelis, but it is a warning to the world. Israel has among the world’s highest levels of vaccination for COVID-19, with 78% of those 12 and older fully vaccinated, the vast majority with the Pfizer vaccine. Yet the country is now logging one of the world’s highest infection rates, with nearly 650 new cases daily per million people. More than half are in fully vaccinated people, underscoring the extraordinary transmissibility of the Delta variant and stoking concerns that the benefits of vaccination ebb over time.

The sheer number of vaccinated Israelis means some breakthrough infections were inevitable, and the unvaccinated are still far more likely to end up in the hospital or die. But Israel’s experience is forcing the booster issue onto the radar for other nations, suggesting as it does that even the best vaccinated countries will face a Delta surge.

“This is a very clear warning sign for the rest of world,” says Ran Balicer, chief innovation officer at Clalit Health Services (CHS), Israel’s largest health maintenance organization (HMO). “If it can happen here, it can probably happen everywhere.”

Israel is being closely watched now because it was one of the first countries out of the gate with vaccinations in December 2020 and quickly achieved a degree of population coverage that was the envy of other nations— for a time. The nation of 9.3 million also has a robust public health infrastructure and a population wholly enrolled in HMOs that track them closely, allowing it to produce high-quality, real-world data on how well vaccines are working.

“I watch [Israeli data] very, very closely because it is some of the absolutely best data coming out anywhere in the world,” says David O’Connor, a viral sequencing expert at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. “Israel is the model,” agrees Eric Topol, a physician-scientist at Scripps Research. “It’s pure mRNA [messenger RNA] vaccines. It’s out there early. It’s got a very high level population [uptake]. It’s a working experimental lab for us to learn from.”

Israel’s HMOs, led by CHS and Maccabi Healthcare Services (MHS), track demographics, comorbidities, and a trove of coronavirus metrics on infections, illnesses, and deaths. “We have rich individual-level data that allows us to provide real-world evidence in near–real time,” Balicer says. (The United Kingdom also compiles a wealth of data. But its vaccination campaign ramped up later than Israel’s, making its current situation less reflective of what the future may portend; and it has used three different vaccines, making its data harder to parse.)

Now, the effects of waning immunity may be beginning to show in Israelis vaccinated in early winter; a preprint published last month by scientists at MHS found that protection from COVID-19 infection during June and July dropped in proportion to the length of time since an individual was vaccinated. People vaccinated in January had a 2.26 times greater risk for a breakthrough infection than those vaccinated in April. (Potential confounders include the fact that the very oldest Israelis, with the weakest immune systems, were vaccinated first.)

Israel’s sobering setback

Israel, which has led the world in launching vaccinations and in data gathering, is confronting a surge of COVID-19 cases that officials expect to push hospitals to the brink. Nearly 60% of gravely ill patients are fully vaccinated.

March 2020AugustJanuary 2021MayAugustNew daily COVID−19 cases010003000500070009000First vaccinationDelta variantidentified50% vaccinatedDecember 19March 15April 8
K. FRANKLIN/SCIENCE

At the same time, cases in the country, which were scarcely registering at the start of summer, have been doubling every week to 10 days since then, with the Delta variant responsible for most of them. They have now soared to their highest level since mid-February, with hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions beginning to follow. How much of the current surge is due to waning immunity versus the power of the Delta variant to spread like wildfire is uncertain.

What is clear is that “breakthrough” cases are not the rare events the term implies. As of 15 August, 514 Israelis were hospitalized with severe or critical COVID-19, a 31% increase from just 4 days earlier. Of the 514, 59% were fully vaccinated. Of the vaccinated, 87% were 60 or older. “There are so many breakthrough infections that they dominate and most of the hospitalized patients are actually vaccinated,” says Uri Shalit, a bioinformatician at the Israel Institute of Technology (Technion) who has consulted on COVID-19 for the government. “One of the big stories from Israel [is]: ‘Vaccines work, but not well enough.’”

“The most frightening thing to the government and the Ministry of Health is the burden on hospitals,” says Dror Mevorach, who cares for COVID-19 patients at Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem and advises the government. At his hospital, he is lining up anesthesiologists and surgeons to spell his medical staff in case they become overwhelmed by a wave like January’s, when COVID-19 patients filled 200 beds. “The staff is exhausted,” he says, and he has restarted a weekly support group for them “to avoid some kind of PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder] effect.”

To try to tame the surge, Israel has turned to booster shots, starting on 30 July with people 60 and older and, last Friday, expanding to people 50 and older. As of Monday, nearly 1 million Israelis had received a third dose, according to the Ministry of Health. Global health leaders including Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, have pleaded with developed countries not to administer boosters given that most of the world’s population hasn’t received even a single dose. The wealthy nations pondering or already administering booster vaccines so far mostly reserve them for special populations such as the immune compromised and health care workers.

Still, studies suggest boosters might have broader value. Researchers have shown that boosting induces a prompt surge in antibodies, which are needed in the nose and throat as a crucial first line of defense against infection. The Israeli government’s decision to start boosting those 50 and older was driven by preliminary Ministry of Health data indicating people over age 60 who have received a third dose were half as likely as their twice-vaccinated peers to be hospitalized in recent days, Mevorach says. CHS also reported that out of a sample of more than 4500 patients who received boosters, 88% said any side effects from the third shot were no worse, and sometimes milder, than from the second.

Yet boosters are unlikely to tame a Delta surge on their own, says Dvir Aran, a biomedical data scientist at Technion. In Israel, the current surge is so steep that “even if you get two-thirds of those 60-plus [boosted], it’s just gonna give us another week, maybe 2 weeks until our hospitals are flooded.” He says it’s also critical to vaccinate those who still haven’t received their first or second doses, and to return to the masking and social distancing Israel thought it had left behind—but has begun to reinstate.

Aran’s message for the United States and other wealthier nations considering boosters is stark: “Do not think that the boosters are the solution.”

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/08/grim-warning-israel-vaccination-blunts-does-not-defeat-delta

China: Delta variant steps up infection rates

 

  • A commercial flight from Russia in July 2021 may have introduced the highly contagious Delta variant of the virus into China.
  • By the beginning of August, at least 15 out of 31 provinces on the Chinese mainland have reported COVID-19 cases.
  • In 2020, China’s policy of “zero tolerance” towards COVID-19 swiftly brought the world’s first outbreak under control within the country’s borders.
  • However, it remains uncertain whether the same strategy will work against the more infectious Delta variant, while there are concerns about the levels of protection that Chinese vaccines provide.

On July 28, 2021, Ma Xiaowei, the minister in charge of China’s National Health Commission, declared that his country had brought the first outbreak of COVID-19 under control within 3 months.

In a meeting with the health ministers from BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) and other global health officials, Ma Xiaowei said that China was the only major economy in the world to achieve growth in 2020.

As the pandemic that began in Wuhan in December 2019 spread around the globe, China reduced new infections close to zero by enforcing some of the most restrictive lockdown measures seen anywhere in the world.

A week before the BRICS meeting, however, this policy of “zero tolerance” was facing its most serious challenge after experts detected a new outbreak in the eastern city of Nanjing.

A commercial flight from Russia that landed in Nanjing on July 10 appears to have sparked the outbreak by introducing the highly infectious Delta variant into the country, according to Chinese authorities.

According to CNN, routine testing revealed SARS-CoV-2 infections in nine airport cleaners. Since then, at least 26 cities across China have reported cases of this variant.

Just a few weeks after the first cases in Nanjing, 15 out of 31 provinces on the Chinese mainland had reported SARS-CoV-2 infections.

In its daily briefing on August 9, 2021, the National Health Commission reported 125 new cases, 94 of them indigenous.


Scientists first identified the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 in India in December 2020.

The variant has two key mutations in its spike proteins that allow it to cause infection in human cells much more easily, making it more transmissible.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Trusted Source report that the Delta variant is almost twice as contagious as previous variants.

Research suggests that, in unvaccinated individuals, the new variant may also be more likely to cause severe illness and hospitalization.

Worryingly, an outbreak in Provincetown, MA, in July 2021 suggests that vaccinated persons who contract infection with the Delta variant are just as infectious as unvaccinated cases.

The finding led the CDCTrusted Source to recommend that even fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor public places in areas of substantial or high transmission.

Faced with an unexpected resurgence of the virus, authorities in China have persisted with their policy of zero tolerance through targeted lockdowns, contact tracing, and quarantining close contacts of individuals with the infection.

In Nanjing, for example, the entire population has undergone testing, while officials have locked down residential compounds with confirmed cases. All cinemas, gyms, bars, and libraries are closed.

In theory, China should be in a better position to contain the virus than in the early months of 2020, having administered more than 1.65 billion doses of vaccine.

But, as health authorities in the United States and elsewhere have discovered, vaccination provides less protection against the Delta variant.

CNN reports that the “vast majority” of people with a SARS-CoV-2 infection in the outbreak in Nanjing had already received their vaccination.

What’s more, there are concerns about the efficacy of China’s homegrown vaccines, Sinovac and Sinopharm.

The evidence of their efficacy against Delta is lacking from China itself due to relatively few cases. But in countries that China has supplied with its vaccines, such as Chile and Mongolia, cases are high compared with countries with similarly high vaccine coverage, such as Israel and the U.S.

Clinical trials suggest that SinovacTrusted Source and SinopharmTrusted Source, which manufacturers have based on inactivated viruses, are 50–79% effective at preventing infection. By contrast, ModernaTrusted Source and Pfizer-BioNTechTrusted Source, which are mRNA vaccines, confer more than 90% protection.

“Right now, what we can see very clearly is that the antibody level in people who received BioNTech is much higher — much, much higher — than the antibody level in people who received Sinovac,” Prof. Ben Cowling, head of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Hong Kong, told CNN.

That does not mean the Chinese vaccines are a failure, said Prof. Cowling. He explained:

“Somewhere like Chile, somewhere like Mongolia, vaccines have saved a lot of lives, but maybe they haven’t been able to stop the virus from spreading and causing mild infection in vaccinated people, and then, of course, the potential for more severe infection in people who haven’t yet been vaccinated.”

This means that even in areas where vaccine coverage is very high, they may not be sufficient to prevent the spread of the Delta variant.

On July 22, two days after the Nanjing cluster was first detected, a health expert in the city said the “vast majority” of individuals with a SARS-CoV-2 infection had undergone vaccination.

This calls into question whether China’s policy of zero tolerance to COVID-19 can work against the highly infectious Delta variant.

Countries, such as Singapore and the United Kingdom, have adopted a more pragmatic attitude that many have referred to as “learning to live with the virus.”

This approach argues that societies must accept a steady rate of ongoing infections — most of them relatively mild as a result of vaccination — in order to sustain their economies and protect the well-being of the majority of citizens.

According to Vincent Ni, China affairs correspondent of the U.K.-based newspaper The Guardian, the Chinese virologist Dr. Zhang Wenhong, Ph.D. — popularly known as “China’s Dr. Fauci” — has said the outbreak in Nanjing should serve as “food for thought for the future of our pandemic response.”

Dr. Wenhong, who is head of the center of infectious diseases at Huashan Hospital of Fudan University, wrote in an essay:

“The data tell us that even if each of us were to be vaccinated in the future, COVID-19 would still be endemic, but at a lower level with a lower fatality rate. After the liberalization of vaccines, there will still be infections in the future.”

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/china-delta-variant-steps-up-infection-rates

Hierarchical clustering by patient-reported pain distribution alone IDs distinct chronic pain subgroups

 




PDF: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0254862&type=printable

Abstract

Background

In clinical practice, the bodily distribution of chronic pain is often used in conjunction with other signs and symptoms to support a diagnosis or treatment plan. For example, the diagnosis of fibromyalgia involves tallying the areas of pain that a patient reports using a drawn body map. It remains unclear whether patterns of pain distribution independently inform aspects of the pain experience and influence patient outcomes. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the clinical relevance of patterns of pain distribution using an algorithmic approach agnostic to diagnosis or patient-reported facets of the pain experience.

Methods and findings

A large cohort of patients (N = 21,658) completed pain body maps and a multi-dimensional pain assessment. Using hierarchical clustering of patients by body map selection alone, nine distinct subgroups emerged with different patterns of body region selection. Clinician review of cluster body maps recapitulated some clinically-relevant patterns of pain distribution, such as low back pain with radiation below the knee and widespread pain, as well as some unique patterns. Demographic and medical characteristics, pain intensity, pain impact, and neuropathic pain quality all varied significantly across cluster subgroups. Multivariate modeling demonstrated that cluster membership independently predicted pain intensity and neuropathic pain quality. In a subset of patients who completed 3-month follow-up questionnaires (N = 7,138), cluster membership independently predicted the likelihood of improvement in pain, physical function, and a positive overall impression of change related to multidisciplinary pain care.

Conclusions

This study reports a novel method of grouping patients by pain distribution using an algorithmic approach. Pain distribution subgroup was significantly associated with differences in pain intensity, impact, and clinically relevant outcomes. In the future, algorithmic clustering by pain distribution may be an important facet in chronic pain biosignatures developed for the personalization of pain management.

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0254862

Elapsed time since BNT162b2 vaccine and risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection in large cohort

 Ariel Israel, 

Eugene MerzonAlejandro A. SchäfferYotam ShenharIlan GreenAvivit Golan-CohenEytan RuppinEli MagenShlomo Vinker

FDA Lifts Clinical Hold On Rocket Pharma's X-Linked Inherited Disorder Trial

 

  • The FDA has lifted the clinical hold on Rocket Pharmaceuticals Inc's (NASDAQ: RCKT) Phase 1 trial of RP-A501 (gene therapy) for Danon Disease, allowing patient enrollment to resume.

  • The hold was removed after the Company addressed the FDA's requests to modify the trial protocol and other supporting documents with revised patient selection and management guidelines.

  • The Company has initiated steps to resume the program as soon as possible and expects to commence dosing in the low-dose (6.7e13 vg/kg) pediatric patient cohort in Q3 of 2021.

  • Related content: Benzinga's Full FDA Calendar.

  • The Company plans to report updated longer-term data from the low-dose (6.7e13 vg/kg) and higher-dose (1.1e14 vg/kg) young adult cohorts in Q4.

  • Rocket's Danon Disease program was placed on clinical hold by the FDA in May.

  • Danon Disease is a rare X-linked inherited disorder caused by mutations in the gene encoding lysosome-associated membrane protein 2 (LAMP-2), an essential mediator of autophagy.

  • The disorder results in the accumulation of autophagosomes and glycogen, particularly in cardiac muscle and other tissues, which ultimately leads to heart failure.

Falsified COVISHIELD vaccine identified in the WHO regions of Africa and South- East Asia

 

Alert Summary

This WHO Medical Product Alert refers to falsified COVISHIELD (ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 Corona Virus Vaccines
(Recombinant)) identified in the WHO African Region, and the WHO South-East Asia Region. The falsified products were reported to WHO in July and August 2021. The genuine manufacturer of COVISHIELD (Serum Institute of India Pvt. Ltd.) has confirmed that the products listed in this alert are falsified. These falsified products have been reported at the patient level in Uganda and India.

Genuine COVISHIELD vaccine is indicated for active immunisation of individuals 18 years or older for the prevention of coronavirus disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The use of genuine COVID-19 vaccines should be in accordance with official guidance from national regulatory authorities.

Falsified COVID-19 vaccines pose a serious risk to global public health and place an additional burden on
vulnerable populations and health systems. It is important to detect and remove these falsified products from
circulation to prevent harm to patients.

 

The products identified in this alert are confirmed as falsified on the basis that they deliberately/ fraudulently misrepresent their identity, composition or source:

  • Batch 4121Z040 - the expiry date (10.08.2021) on this product is falsified
  • COVISHIELD 2ml - the genuine manufacturer does not produce COVISHIELD in 2ml (4 doses).


 

Table 1: Products subject of WHO Medical Product Alert N°5/2021

Table1 N5/2021_EN

Advice to regulatory authorities and the public

WHO requests increased vigilance within the supply chains of countries and regions likely to be affected by these falsified products. Increased vigilance should include hospitals, clinics, health centers, wholesalers, distributors, pharmacies, and any other suppliers of medical products.

All medical products must be obtained from authorized/licensed suppliers. The products’ authenticity and physical condition should be carefully checked. Seek advice from a healthcare professional in case of doubt.

If you are in possession of the above products, please do not use them.

If you have used these products, or you suffered an adverse reaction/event having used these products, you are advised to seek immediate medical advice from a qualified healthcare professional and to report the incident to the National Regulatory Authorities/National Pharmacovigilance Centre.

National regulatory / health authorities are advised to immediately notify WHO if these falsified products are
discovered in their country. If you have any information concerning the manufacture, distribution, or supply of
these products, please contact rapidalert@who.int