Coronavirus Update 116: Pfizer COVID 19 Vaccine Explained (Biontech)

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Welcome to another MedCram COVID-19 update. It's  been a little while because I've been in the   intensive care unit treating COVID patients. Sorry  to say that we are starting to expand a little bit   in southern California, and we are seeing more  patients now in the intensive care unit with   COVID-19. If we look at daily new cases in the  United States they are certainly on the uptick   here, and whereas we had not seen an increase in  the new daily death rate in the United States it   is now starting to increase. So where I work, which  is in San Bernardino county, which is in southern   California, since the beginning of the pandemic  what's happened to hospitalizations, you can see   here the green graph is the confirmed COVID-19  positive patient representation, and the pink   here on top are those that are suspected. You can  see overall that hospitalizations here in southern   California are on the rise, and that is not unique  in terms of the United States, we're starting to   see daily new cases in South Dakota start to reach  all-time highs and the death rate is also going   along with that as well. We're also seeing that in  North Dakota as well in terms of daily new cases   and also the daily death rate as well, but perhaps  the epicenter here in the United States would be   the state of Texas, where we can see that daily new  cases in Texas has reached an all-time high, but   daily deaths have not yet increased. That could  be because of a time lag, of course. This is not   just the United States, but it's going up. Around  the world, we see daily new cases increasing here   and are at an all-time high, and daily deaths  around the world are also at an all-time high. As an example, daily cases in the United Kingdom  are quite elevated and whereas before we do   not see deaths increasing, we're starting to see  daily death rates increase in the United Kingdom. In Italy, we are again seeing a increase in the  daily new cases, and this is reminiscent of what we   saw in March in northern Italy where we're seeing  an increase in daily deaths as well at this point, and this is all to say that, of course, there's  a lot of bad news around the world regarding   this virus, and of course, recently there's been  some good news, and we're going to talk about   vaccines, and a great website to follow this is  RAPS, or Regulatory Affairs Professional Society, which has a great COVID-19 vaccine tracker, and for  the next couple of videos we're going to highlight   different vaccines that are being developed  around the world for COVID-19. In the next few   months or even weeks there's going to be vaccines  that are going to be released brought to market   and consumers are going to have to make a choice  as to which vaccine they want to get. It's going to   be really important to understand and know about  those vaccines and their track records, so we're   going to dig deep and look at these vaccines and  compare them looking at various characteristics,  safety data, and efficacy, and the first one  that we're going to look at is the vaccine   that is being put out by Pfizer and BioNTec, and  you can see here on the COVID-19 vaccine tracker, there are a number of different vaccines that  you can click on them, and there are links so   that you can look at the different publications  and be educated on these vaccines. So the first   thing that we're going to look at is the Pfizer  BioNTech one that is here and let's get started. So the first thing that you've got to understand  is the biochemistry of what's happening with an   infection. Now as we've talked about before, you  have a cell and on that cell is a ACE2 receptor, and then what you have is the virus and on the  virus, as you've heard by now, are spike proteins, and so what happens is the spike protein interacts  with this ACE2 receptor and the virus gets   internalized in the cell and it basically takes  over the cell or hijacks the machinery of the cell,   and so really this interaction between the spike  protein and this ACE2 receptor needs to be blocked   if you want to prevent infection, and one of the  ways of doing that, traditionally, is by injecting   fragments of the protein into the body and have  antibodies be made against these spike proteins, so that the virus is not allowed to bind this ACE2  receptor and you neutralize this infection and   that's generally how vaccines have worked in the  past and the way that this virus SARS-CoV-2. How it does this is that there is this mRNA genome, which is inside of the virus and so when the virus   binds with the cell, the cell internalizes the  envelope, but it also internalizes the messenger   RNA inside the cell now. If we were to blow  this up and show you what happens inside it   would look something like this: here's the cell  with the nucleus. In the nucleus you have DNA   and that DNA is converted into RNA and these are  made up of nucleotides. Well, that RNA is converted   into messenger RNA, and it's exported out of the  nucleus into the cytoplasm where you then have   something called messenger RNA, which is still in  the same language as the DNA is, but now you've got   mRNA and mRNA is a very specific structure  it has something we call a five prime cap,   it has information, and then it has a  non-transcribed region at the end with   a poly-A tail, and this is what allows you to make  proteins, because this messenger RNA is translated   by something called ribosomes into protein, and  it's this protein that can turn into just about   any type of protein you want, depending on the  instructions here in the mRNA. Now as we talked   about before, when SARS-CoV-2 infects the cells, it  causes the machinery in the cell to make proteins   for more viruses, and so it's making more spike  proteins. It's making more proteins that go on   its surface. It's making a whole bunch of other  things that go into making more SARS-CoV-2 virus, and of course these proteins here can be  incorporated into the cell membrane, or they can   be exported to outside the cell so this sort of  brings us to why Pfizer and BioNTech are teaming   up. It's because the German company BioNTech has  perfected, or at least significantly advanced, the   technology of infecting with messenger RNA, and so  how this new vaccine is going to work is they have   a way of making messenger RNA, but delivering it to  the cells in a lipid membrane. Now if you imagine   a micelle or a lipid bilayer, in which the  mRNA is enclosed into so it's well protected, these very small particles can then fuse with  these cells, and then what happens is the messenger   create a protein that they have genetically  engineered, and in this case that protein is a   version, if you will, of the spike protein but  it's a version that is slightly different in that   it holds the position of what it looks like when  it is docked outside the SARS-CoV-2 virus not   after it binds and is internalized into the cell  so that the final product of this messenger RNA   after it goes into your cells and after your  cells take their messenger RNA and make the   protein that they want your cells to make. It's  going to make a protein inside of your body   that is going to be immunogenic and cause you  to form antibodies against this spike protein,  and here's what it looks like. This is a  publication that was published on BioArchive, and we'll give you the link to it in the  description below, but you can see here that this   is the messenger RNA that they've constructed here  is the five prime cap analog. Here are the coding   sites for the receptor binding domain. That's  where the spike protein binds to the ACE receptor,   and here is S1 S2. These are portions of the  spike protein, and then you can see here is the   non- or untranslated region, and then finally the  poly A tail. These additions to the messenger RNA   allow it to escape destruction in the cytoplasm of  the native cells. So in other words it preserves it, so that it gets translated into the protein, and  here's a picture of the protein here down below   that your body makes from the instructions from  this vaccine. It's a very immunogenic structure   that causes antibodies to be made. Now last  month in the New England Journal of Medicine. They published an article called safety and  immunogenicity of two RNA-based COVID-19   vaccine candidates, and these were the two  candidates that were put forth by Pfizer   and BioNTech and they wanted to see basically  how these two candidates did, to see which ones   would go on to the phase two and phase three  trials. Let's take a look at these, because one   of the big questions that we're gonna have when  we take a vaccine is, how safe is this vaccine? And while we're not gonna get a full picture  early on because a lot of the data takes months   and months to come out, we can certainly see up  front what type of a profile these vaccines have, and you should know what the names of these two  candidates are. The first one is BNT162b1 and the   second one is BNT162b2, so we'll call this number  one and number two, and basically what they found   was while they were not looking for efficacy, they  were looking for safety, they found that the second   vaccine, number two, was associated with a lower  incidence and severity of systemic reactions. So the first thing we're going to do is look  at some of the side effects and we're going to   look at both vaccines, both one and two, and we're  going to look at the older population and the   younger population. So first let's look at  the younger population, 18 to 55 years of   age. That's what we're seeing here on this graph and  the two graphs up top are vaccine number one, and the one here on the bottom is vaccine number  two, and just at first blush you can see here   that vaccine number two seems to have less in  terms of side effects. Now the other thing that I should mention is that they are looking at making  this a two-step vaccine process with the first   vaccine being given and then the second one being  given on day 21, or three weeks later. Interestingly   also this vaccine would have to be refrigerated  in very tightly controlled refrigerators, and so here the first column is the first dose and  the second column is the second dose. So let's take   a look here at vaccine number two. You can see here  that at least 60 to 70 to even 80 or 90 percent   of these patients had some sort of pain at the  injection site. That's not too unreasonable, but   in terms of redness, swelling, either on the first  dose or the second dose of the second vaccine, that it doesn't look like there  was a lot in terms of side effects. It seems as though the 30 microgram dose  gave the most in terms of side effects.   If we look in the older population, 65 to 85, once  again, in the vaccine number two there seemed to be   less side effects than in vaccine number one, and once again the biggest problem was pain at   the injection site. But in terms of redness and  swelling, we didn't see much there. What about   more systemic effects? These are the kind of side  effects that we're actually looking for a little   bit more carefully. Once again let's look at the  second vaccine that was being developed, that's b2   here on the bottom, 2. Fever, fatigue, chills, both  in the first dose and in the second dose were much   less than that in the first vaccine that was being  developed, and that dose two seemed to give higher   side effects or higher incidence of side effects, the biggest one in terms of incidence was fatigue   in both the first dose and in the second  dose ranging from about 40 to 70 percent.   If you look at participants in the 65 to 85 years  of age group, you can see how the second vaccine, or   b2, had far fewer side effects than b1, so you  can see the conclusions that the authors came   to: they said the safety and the immunogenicity  data from this United States phase one trial   added to earlier interim safety and immunogenicity  data to support the selection of b2 for advancement   to a pivotal phase 2-3 safety and efficacy  evaluation, and that's exactly what they did.   A press release about the preliminary results came  out about five days ago, and they had enrolled 43,538  participants in this randomized, blinded  trial, and so what they decided as they did   some calculations and they figured that when they  had heard that 94 confirmed cases had occurred, they were going to take a peek at the data to see  how it looked. What they were looking for was to   see how many of these patients who got COVID had  gotten the placebo versus had gotten the actual   vaccine, and what they were able to conclude based  on the data from those first 94 confirmed cases of   COVID-19 was that the vaccine b2 was found to be  more than 90 percent effective in preventing COVID-19   in participants without evidence of prior SARS-Cov-2  infection in this analysis, and what they're   actually asking for now is to continue the study  to go up to 164 confirmed cases to see if this   holds up and if there are other data points that  can be made. That's important, because if they were   not to do that, if they were to end the study,  it would be considered unethical to randomize   someone to a placebo given the fact that the  vaccine is so effective at preventing COVID-19,   a potentially deadly disease, and here is the  press release announcing these preliminary   results. We don't have this in a peer-reviewed  publication as yet, but I'm sure it's coming.   You know, in terms of what's actually going on  biochemically inside these people who get this   vaccine, it's very interesting and there are some  hints, because if we look at some earlier trials   with this very same vaccine in monkeys and  in mice, we see some very interesting things,   and this was a paper that was published in Medical  Archive, which we will put in the description below. In terms of the links, what they did is in this  study, before they did the phase one trials that we   just reported on, they looked at how this vaccine  candidate behaved in monkeys and in mice, and so   they say here that this LNP-formulated nucleoside  modified mRNA that encodes the spike glycoprotein   captured in its pre-fusion conformation, which is  what you want you want it to look exactly as it   does on the SARS-CoV-2 virus, so what they found  was that these neutralizing geometric titers were   10 to 18 times that of the SARS-CoV-2 convalescent  human serum panel and not only that but this very   same vaccine that they gave in humans, later on  when they gave it to macaques and to mice they found   that their TH1 type CD4 positive and interferon  gamma positive response was elevated and a CD8   positive T-cell response was also activated and  all of this points toward a wide and diverse   immune response, and one has to figure whether or  not this is the reason why it seems at least on   preliminary data that this vaccine is 90 percent effective. So let's talk a little bit about the vaccine. Here you can see these lipid nanoparticles that  contain the messenger RNA with the code in it. So   if we look at what we have here with the vaccine  from Pfizer BioNTech, they say it's effective   at preventing COVID-19 at around 90 percent. Now  realize the way these endpoints worked was that   seven days after the second vaccine dose, so at 28  days after the first vaccine dose, study subjects   were asked to contact the site coordinator if the  patients had any symptoms of COVID-19 and if after   evaluation it was likely that they had COVID-19, these subjects were given a COVID-19 test. The   study was interrupted when the number of subjects  with COVID-19 positive test results reached 94.   When this happened they unblinded the 94,  so they could see who did and who did not   get the vaccine. It was at that time that they  released some preliminary results showing that the   vaccine was about 90 percent effective. So some interesting  points about that is that really there are no   asymptomatic subjects in this result cohort. We  don't know what this does to asymptomatic patients   and furthermore we don't know how long this effect  lasts either, so those will be questions that have   to be answered down the line. Of note, the data  monitoring committee reported that there was no   serious safety concerns. The other question is: does it stop infection? That's important because   this vaccine may be just important in the  individual that gets it at preventing them from   getting the disease, COVID-19 but the question  is: does actually stop infection with SARS-CoV- 2? That's important, because if it doesn't stop  infection, then you can still infect people   with the virus, and it can still multiply  exponentially. But if it has a sterilizing effect, then it's potentially possible that you could  block the spread of the disease that is still   up in the air and a question at this point. Now a couple of numbers that you should know, Pfizer believes that they should have about  50 million doses by the end of the year, and they are working right now to try to get  emergency use authorization. They also say that   they should have about 1.3 billion doses by next  year. You need to realize that there are two doses. Both doses need to be refrigerated in special  refrigerators that keep them at negative 70   degrees centigrade, and the question is how much  is this all going to cost? Well they're saying that   per injection the cost will be about $19.50. But there has been some reports that they   are working with the US government and for those  in the United States, it should work out to be   free. Now also remember this too, is that apparently  Pfizer did not take any government money in the   production of this vaccine and furthermore Pfizer  is looking at producing this vaccine worldwide, so   this vaccine does have some promise. I would be  very interested to hear what you all have to say   about this vaccine. It's one of four of the  vaccines that we're going to do a deep dive   and look into. I think this one is interesting  because of its novel approach using messenger RNA.   Of course there's another vaccine candidate that  is doing that as well, and that's of course the   Moderna candidate, which we'll talk about coming up  next. Keep in mind that no mRNA-based vaccine has   been approved by the FDA, but this particular  candidate is interesting because we have the   preliminary safety data in, and it looks as though  we have the preliminary results of a report   about the efficacy data. Of course more of  that is to come when it gets published, and so   people can start to make a decision about if this  vaccine becomes available and gets emergency use   authorization and when it becomes available  if they would decide to get this vaccination.   And don't forget to visit us at MedCram.com for  continuing medical education. Thanks for joining us! you
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Channel: MedCram - Medical Lectures Explained CLEARLY
Views: 697,341
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Keywords: coronavirus, covid 19 prevention, coronavirus update, Coronavirus Pandemic Update 116, covid 19, coronavirus outbreak, covid 19 treatment, covid 19 vaccine, pfizer, pfizer vaccine, COVID vaccine, coronavirus vaccine, mrna vaccine, vaccine coronavirus, vaccine update, vaccine COVID 19, vaccine covid, vaccine pfizer, pfizer covid 19 vaccine, vaccine, coronavirus vaccines, coronavirus news, biontech vaccine, covid-19 vaccine, biontech, covid vaccine news, moderna vaccine
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Length: 22min 32sec (1352 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 12 2020
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