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A New Vaccine Aims to Knock Out Lyme Disease
NY1 ^ | Aug. 17, 2023 | Erin Billups

Posted on 08/25/2023 5:08:44 PM PDT by nickcarraway

In much of the country, venturing beyond manicured lawns, into the woods or wild fields means you’re likely heading into tick territory.

There is a lot of work underway to develop therapies to treat tick-borne illnesses and prevent them all together, including an ongoing Pfizer vaccine trial that has enrolled both adults and children. National Health Reporter Erin Billups introduces us to one family whose son is enrolled in the phase three clinical trial.

Whether it’s playing with his sisters, corralling the ducks, or playing with baby chicks, 7-year-old Seamus Naughton is outside a lot.

“I don't want my hands to get that dirty. So I'm not picking up all of them,” said Seamus as he helped gather chicken eggs for his mother.

“Seamus especially is like a very active kid. [He] really needs to be outside to feel his best, function his best,” said Taylor Naughton, Seamus’ mother.

Seamus loves being outdoors with his chickens The growing presence of disease-laden ticks though, has cast a cloud over the Naughton family’s love of outdoors. Since the CDC began tracking cases of Lyme disease in 1991 the number of cases each year has more than tripled.

“We love to go on hikes. We love to camp. You know, we've got our little farm out here. So we love to be outside. And we certainly don't want to discourage them,” said Naughton. “We don't want to be in the house like holed up because we're scared we're going to get Lyme.”

When Naughton learned of a pediatric vaccine trial for Lyme she jumped at the opportunity and enrolled Seamus. “I just felt like him being exposed to Lyme and or antibiotics consistently is more concerning to me than, you know, potential vaccine.”

“The incidence of Lyme disease has been creeping up and in some areas doubling and tripling,” said Dr. Sunanda Gaur, director of the Pediatric Clinical Research Center at Rutgers Medical School. “That has to do with deforestation and how climate change and all of that might be playing into why Lyme disease is more prevalent now.”

Gaur is leading the Pfizer-Valneva Lyme vaccine site at Rutgers, where Seamus is enrolled. The phase three trial includes more than six thousand participants ages five and older, and is testing the efficacy of a novel approach to tackling Lyme.

Instead of fighting lyme once it’s within the body like traditional vaccines, the immunized person delivers neutralizing antibodies to the tick once it attaches.

“The deer tick that's carrying the Lyme bacteria bites the person, the antibodies from the blood actually enter the tick's guts and they kill the bacteria in the gut,” explains Gaur. “So the tick, as it feeds on the person, can no longer transmit the bacteria to the person and therefore protects them from getting Lyme disease.”

Seamus is enrolled in a clinical trials for a vaccine against Lyme disease Full vaccination requires four doses, which Naughton says Seamus had no reaction to. “He didn't have any symptoms after the fact. He didn't swell. He didn't get a fever.”

The companies report that phase two trial results show the vaccine, called VLA15, triggers robust immunogenicity — meaning production of the neutralizing antibodies that kill the Borrelia burgdorferi bacteria, which causes lyme disease.

Children were included in Pfizer’s Lyme vaccine trial nearly from the beginning, because Gaur said, kids may need a vaccine even more than adults. They’re more likely to pick up a tick when playing outdoors.

“It's hard. You can't always control what they want to wear,” said Naughton. “I am optimistic that, you know, there's more and more options, maybe for researchers to find something that works that's effective.”

Naughton says her kids clothes aren't always the best for tick protection Phase three trials are still ongoing. It may take a couple years before Pfizer can apply for FDA approval of VLA15. They need to first complete required follow up of participants.

Gaur says whether approval comes sooner rather than later, people should still take precautions while spending time outdoors; by wearing light colors, using bug spray with 30% DEET and doing tick checks.

“When they come back home, you do the tick check, which means you look at all those areas behind the ear, in the folds, in the axilla (underarms), in the groin, all those little spots with the kids, the ticks like to go and hide and remember they're very tiny,” said Gaur.

Because it’s not just Lyme that ticks carry. Both a malaria-like illness called babesiosis and alpha-gal syndrome, which triggers a meat allergy, are among about a dozen other diseases that can be passed from ticks to humans.

There are vaccines in the works for that too. Researchers at Yale University have developed an mRNA vaccine that targets tick saliva, preventing the bugs from feeding well.

“That's actually very fascinating because you're arming a person against the tick itself and then that would work for any tick borne diseases, particularly with the deer tick,” said Gaur.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Outdoors; Science
KEYWORDS: lyme
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1 posted on 08/25/2023 5:08:44 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

It’s an mRNA vaccine. They aren’t putting that hot dog water in my arm.


2 posted on 08/25/2023 5:11:53 PM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
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To: nickcarraway

I’ll pass on any vaccine. Lyme’s disease killed a friend of mine and my daughter had it but was caught really early, treated and no problem.


3 posted on 08/25/2023 5:12:25 PM PDT by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: nickcarraway

Ask yourself, what kind of a loving mother enters her child in a vaccine trial?


4 posted on 08/25/2023 5:12:53 PM PDT by JayGalt (A proud slave must be broken before the contagion spreads. Ever was it thus.)
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To: nickcarraway

How many trust vaccines after this last batch?


5 posted on 08/25/2023 5:14:41 PM PDT by davidb56
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To: DesertRhino

I saw that the other “vaccine” from Yale was mRNA, but I didn’t see that the one the article was about was. Did I miss it?


6 posted on 08/25/2023 5:20:45 PM PDT by _longranger81
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To: nickcarraway

Pfizer again! For Lyme Disease?

The CDC is also recommending a new general RSV vaccine for everyone this Fall.

Guess who makes it?

Pfizer!

18 months ago, the only people who were threatened by RSV were children, and the elderly in nursing homes.


7 posted on 08/25/2023 5:21:11 PM PDT by zeestephen (Trump "Lost" By 43,000 Votes - Spread Across Three States - GA, WI, AZ)
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To: nickcarraway
“That has to do with deforestation and how climate change and all of that might be playing into why Lyme disease is more prevalent now.”

Complete B.S. Lymes started in Northern areas, not Southern states.

Deforestation has very little to do with Lymes.

Lymes is like any disease introduced into virgin territory. It spreads fast.

The best prevention measure, if you are going into tick country, is to use permethrin treated clothes. All US Army and Marine military combat clothes are treated with it.

8 posted on 08/25/2023 5:21:52 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: zeestephen

How will people be able to work, when they have to spend so much time every day being vaccinated?


9 posted on 08/25/2023 5:22:26 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
--- "Full vaccination requires four doses...."

M A R K E T I N G again. Jabs of all sorts of diseases in the pipeline. Jab. Jab. Jab.

10 posted on 08/25/2023 5:24:47 PM PDT by Worldtraveler once upon a time (Degrow government)
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To: nickcarraway
Lyme disease is very serious and can lead to quite debilitating conditions!

I'll take my chances.

What's worse? A Pfizer vaccine or Lyme disease?

I'm not about to find out.

11 posted on 08/25/2023 5:25:19 PM PDT by icclearly
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To: maddog55

“my daughter had it but was caught really early, treated and no problem.”

Me too, but Lyme Disease is sneaky: expect it to return in nefarious ways...


12 posted on 08/25/2023 5:28:37 PM PDT by Does so ( 🇺🇦...................."Who is Ray Epps?" should be overstamped on every piece of currency.)
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To: DesertRhino
No more jabs for me.


13 posted on 08/25/2023 5:57:29 PM PDT by lizma2
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To: nickcarraway
Pfizer?

Really

Nothing, no thing, branded by Pfizer will ever enter my precious blood stream (again, anyway).

One friend of mine suffered partial vision loss a few days following the Pfizer covid vaccine.

Another, so sadly, suffered a stroke, a few days following a Pfizer booster, and now resides in our Veterans' cemetery.

Nothing, no thing, branded by Pfizer will ever enter my precious blood stream

14 posted on 08/25/2023 6:08:06 PM PDT by Seaplaner (Never give in. Never give in. Never, never, never...in nothing, great or small...Winston ChurchIill)
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To: nickcarraway

Pfizer? Too bad, no thanks.


15 posted on 08/25/2023 6:13:45 PM PDT by mikey_hates_everything
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To: marktwain

“Complete B.S. Lymes started in Northern areas, not Southern states. “

First identified in Lyme, Connecticut.


16 posted on 08/25/2023 6:53:48 PM PDT by DBrow
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To: DesertRhino

It was apparently created by the military is a weapon, limes disease


17 posted on 08/25/2023 7:43:02 PM PDT by Therapsid (eagan the lack of food is expected to kill around 1 billion next year)
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To: Therapsid

Yup.

https://rense.com//general67/plumislandlyme.htm


18 posted on 08/25/2023 8:18:50 PM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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To: nickcarraway

LOL. they think I’m going to take a vaccine. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAH. It could cure male pattern baldness and I’d tell them to piss off.


19 posted on 08/25/2023 8:47:53 PM PDT by zeugma (Stop deluding yourself that America is still a free country.)
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To: DesertRhino

VLA15 vaccine is NOT an mRNA vaccine:

“VLA15 is a multivalent recombinant protein vaccine that targets six serotypes of Borrelia representing the most common pathogenic strains found in the United States and Europe.”

https://valneva.com/research-development/lyme-disease/


20 posted on 08/25/2023 9:02:56 PM PDT by catnipman (In a post-covid world, ALL "science" is now political science: stolen elections have consequences)
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