Covid-19 vaccine alone won't defeat spread of
virus, report warns
Issues over production, efficacy and public trust mean
restrictions may be needed for some time
Nicola
Davis Science correspondent
@NicolaKSDavis
Thu 1 Oct
2020 15.24 BSTLast modified on Thu 1 Oct 2020 20.41 BST
A
successful vaccine for Covid-19 will not conquer the spread of the virus alone,
with restrictions on daily life likely to continue for some time, a team of
experts have said.
Hundreds of
teams of researchers around the world are working to produce a vaccine against
the coronavirus, with 11 currently in phase three human trials. The UK
government has reserved access to six potential vaccines and has raised hopes
that a vaccine could be on the cards by spring next year.
A report
from a multidisciplinary group convened by the Royal Society, called Delve
(Data Evaluation and Learning for Viral Epidemics), says there are serious challenges
to producing a vaccine, including hurdles in manufacturing and storage,
questions around how well vaccines will work, and problems with public trust.
Prof Nilay
Shah, the head of the department of chemical engineering at Imperial College
London, and an author of the report, said that while there would be vaccines
available in March – not least because manufacturing is beginning before the
results of trials are known– the question was whether they will have been shown
to be effective and passed regulatory processes.
“Even if we
get through that and the material is available and vaccination does start in
the spring, it will take a long time to work through the different priority
groups initially and then the wider population later on,” he said, adding that
it may take up to a year.
Prof
Charles Bangham, the chair of immunology at Imperial College London and a
co-author of the report, said: “Even if it is effective, it is very unlikely
that we will be able to get back completely to normal. There is going to be a
sliding scale even after the introduction of a vaccine that we know to be
effective. We will have to gradually relax some of the other interventions.”
Bangham
said few vaccines completely block an infection, but they can reduce both the
severity of disease and the chance of passing it on. However, in the case of
vaccines in development against Covid, myriad questions remain.
Concerns
have already been raised that vaccines against Covid may be less effective in
older adults than in other groups – a potential issue if supplies are limited
and vaccinations have to be prioritised to those most at risk from becoming
infected.
The team
says a policy of vaccinating widely in an attempt to produce herd immunity
could also run into potential difficulties, particularly if the vaccine has
limited effectiveness. And for any mass vaccination programme, there are
manufacturing and supply hurdles to overcome.
“We need to
make sure that [we are going to have] all the ingredients for these tens of
millions of doses in the UK, and several billions globally,” said Shah, noting
that these range from chemicals to glass vials, while some may need to be kept
at extremely low temperatures.
A
vaccination programme would need to carried out at about 10 times the pace of
seasonal flu vaccinations, said Shah. “That would need many thousands of
individual healthcare workers, retrained people, dedicated solely to delivering
vaccinations,” he said.
Public
trust in a vaccine may also present a hurdle. Dr Zania Stamataki, a researcher
in viral immunology at the University of Birmingham, said: “By the time the
first vaccines are released, we need to do our best to dispel any myths
surrounding vaccination and reassure individuals and families that they are
safe, tested properly and that no corners have been cut in their preparation at
all regarding safety.”
In response
to the DELVE report, the department of health and social care said: “This study
fails to reflect the enormous amount of planning and preparation that has taken
place across Government to quickly rollout a safe and effective Covid-19
vaccine. Our plans include significantly expanding the trained workforce who
can administer COVID-19 and flu vaccines, making it faster and easier for
patients to access the vaccines they need.”
“We are
also confident we have adequate provision or transport, PPE and logistical
expertise to deploy a Covid-19 vaccine across the country as quickly as
possible.”


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