Vaccines For Cancer, Heart Diseases To Be Ready By 2030 - Moderna
Category:
Health
Vaccines against cancer and heart disease could be ready by the end of the
decade, according to Moderna’s chief executive.
Dr Paul Burton,
said the advancements made in the field of mRNA — the technology used to make
his company’s flagship Covid shot — have ushered in a golden era of vaccines.
He predicts that by 2030 there will be vaccines for ‘all sorts’ of
incurable conditions, saving ‘hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of
lives.’
READ: Beware! Alcohol CAUSES Cancer- New Research
Early studies have already shown ‘tremendous promise’, he added. But they are
not likely to be your typical vaccine — they will need to be highly
personalized and expensive.
Heart disease and cancer are the
biggest killers in the US, behind 1.3million fatalities annually — or more
than one in three of all deaths recorded.
Dr Paul Burton, the
chief executive of the vaccine maker, told The Guardian: ‘We will have that
vaccine and it will be highly effective, and it will save hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, of lives.
READ: Doctors Use HIV Virus to Cure 31 Year Old Man of Leukemia
‘I think we will be able to offer personalized cancer vaccines against
multiple different tumor types to people around the world.’
He
added: ‘I think what we have learned in recent months is that if you ever
thought that mRNA was just for infectious diseases, or just for Covid, the
evidence now is that that’s absolutely not the case.
‘It can be
applied to all sorts of disease areas; We are in cancer, infectious diseases,
cardiovascular disease, autoimmune diseases, rare diseases.
READ: Over 100 Nigerians Undergo Cancer Treatment In India Every Year
‘We have studies in all of those areas and they have all shown tremendous
promise.’
Dr Burton did not say how the vaccines would work, but
previous studies have shown how mRNA could be used to fight cancer.
MRNA vaccines work by instructing cells to produce a protein that
triggers an immune response against a specific pathogen, like Covid.
READ: Men Who Sleep With Multiple Women Reduce Their Risk of Prostrate Cancer - Research Study
Scientists say these instructions can also be tweaked to get cells to
make the antigens from the surface of cancer cells, alerting the immune system
to cancer cells and triggering an attack.
To vaccinate someone
against cancer, doctors would first take a biopsy from the person’s tumor.
They would then identify the antigen on the cancer cells and code
the mRNA vaccine to trigger cells to make the same antigen.
READ: Nigerian Couple Die In UK of Bowel Cancer Leaving Five Sons Orphaned
The vaccine would then be administered to a patient, triggering their cells to
make the antigen and sparking an immune response against it.
Immune cells would then be trained to destroy any cancer cells
that remain in the body and to hunt out any cancer cells that return.
Doctors say mRNA vaccines could be tweaked for each patient to
account for different cancer types and differences between patients. But this
is likely to prove expensive.
READ: This Herb Decomposes Cancer Cells in Days
Trials of mRNA cancer vaccines are already underway in the UK and the
US, with results expected over the coming months.
They include
Moderna’s own cancer vaccine, which was granted ‘breakthrough therapy’ status
by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in February — paving the way for a
fast-tracked approval.
The shot, given alongside an immunotherapy
drug made by Merck, would be used to treat patients recovering from advanced
melanoma who are most at risk of tumors returning.
READ: Men Who Have Performed Oral S*x On Five Or More Partners Risk Cancer
No comments