Monkeypox vaccine expected to induce strong immune response: Study : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Monkeypox vaccine expected to induce strong immune response: Study

Specific VACV-based vaccines have demonstrated high efficacy and are considered an important outbreak control measure

Monkeypox vaccine expected to induce strong immune response: Study

Photo for representational purpose only. Reuters file



PTI

Melbourne, September 9

The recommended vaccinia virus (VACV)-based vaccines will mount a robust immune response against the monkeypox virus observed in the current outbreak, according to a study.

Vaccinia virus is a large, complex, enveloped virus belonging to the poxvirus family.

Since the new virus was first observed in early May, over 52,000 cases have been confirmed in more than 90 countries and regions, the researchers said.

The team undertook genomic research to find out if the genetic mutations observed in monkeypox virus observed in the current outbreak (MPXV-2022) may affect vaccine-induced immune responses against the disease.

"Specific VACV-based vaccines have demonstrated high efficacy against monkeypox viruses in the past and are considered an important outbreak control measure," said Matthew McKay, from the University of Melbourne, Australia.

"However, given this is a novel monkeypox virus, we still lack scientific data on how well human immune responses triggered by VACV-based vaccines will recognise MPXV-2022 and provide protection against the disease," McKay said.

The study, published recently in the journal Viruses, evaluated the genetic similarities and differences between VACV and MPXV-2022, specifically within the protein regions that are targeted by vaccine-induced neutralising antibodies or T cells. 

"While we identified a small number of distinct mutations in MPXV-2022, our study more broadly demonstrates that VACV and MPXV-2022 are highly genetically similar in the regions targeted by the immune system through vaccination," McKay explained.

"Based on our analysis, we anticipate that the immune responses generated by VACV-based vaccines would continue to do a good job of recognising and responding to MPXV-2022, as was the case for monkeypox viruses in the past," said Professor Ahmed Abdul Quadeer, from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

"Our data lends further support to the use of vaccines being recommended globally for combating MPXV-2022,” Quadeer said.

The World Health Organisation has recommended primary preventive vaccination against the new monkeypox virus, which is also known as pre-exposure prophylaxis, for individuals at high risk of exposure.

"While bringing together sequencing and immunological data provides evidence to anticipate a strong immune response, clinical studies are required to determine the exact efficacy of these vaccines against MPXV-2022," McKay added. 

#monkeypox


Top News

Phase-1 sees 62% turnout; violence mars polling in West Bengal, Manipur

Lok sabha elections 2024: Phase-1 sees 62% turnout; violence mars polling in West Bengal, Manipur

Tripura leads with 80% | Bihar at bottom with 48.5% | Easter...

INDIA VOTES 2024: 4 lakh voters in 6 Nagaland districts, but none turns up amid shutdown call

4 lakh voters in 6 Nagaland districts, but none turns up amid shutdown call

Locals’ bid to press Union Govt for ‘Frontier Nagaland Terr...

INDIA bloc marginalising farmers, youth: PM Modi

INDIA bloc marginalising farmers, youth: PM Modi

Addresses 3 rallies, says Congress hasn’t shed its mindset o...

Double engine keeps derailing in Bihar, Mallikarjun Kharge targets Nitish Kumar

Double engine keeps derailing in Bihar, Mallikarjun Kharge targets Nitish Kumar

Accuses BJP of ignoring inflation, joblessness


Cities

View All