Tag Archive for Pfizer

6 Things in the COVID-19 Vaccine

6 Things in the COVID-19 VaccineThe COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech – known by the code name BNT162b, has been in use in the UK for a week and is starting to be deployed in the US. With the regulatory approval to move forward from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration we now have the most detailed info yet on what is in the new COVIID-19 vaccine. MIT’s Technology Review looked at the ingredients in Pfizer‘s (PFE) vaccine and provided some context from scientists and biotech entrepreneurs for those of us without a Ph.D. in organic chemistry. 

Pfizer logo1- mRNA – Pfizer’s vaccine consists of actual genetic information from a virus in the form of messenger RNA, or mRNA, a type of molecule whose usual job is to transport copies of genetic instructions around a cell to guide the assembly of proteins. The authors describe mRNA as a long ticker-tape carrying instructions. It’s fairly delicate stuff, and that’s why Pfizer’s vaccine needs to be kept at around -100 °F until it’s used.

  • Nucleoside-modified messenger RNA (modRNA) encoding the viral spike glycoprotein (S) of SARS-CoV-2

The new vaccine, delivered as a shot in the arm muscle, contains an RNA sequence taken from the virus itself; it causes cells to manufacture the big “spike” protein of the COVID-19 virus, which the pathogen uses to glom onto a person’s cells and gain entry. On its own, without the rest of the virus, the spike is pretty harmless. But your body still reacts to it. This is what leaves you immunized and ready to repel the real virus if it turns up.

The mRNA in the vaccine, to be sure, isn’t quite the same as the stuff in your body. That’s good because cells defenses’ are ready to chop up RNA, especially any that doesn’t belong there. To avoid that, what’s known as “modified nucleosides” have been substituted for some of the mRNA building blocks.

But Pfizer is holding back a little according to the article. The spike gene sequence can be tweaked in small ways for better performance, by means that include swapping letters. We don’t think Pfizer has said exactly what sequence it is using, or what modified nucleosides. That means the content of the shot may not be 100% public.

2- Lipids – The Pfizer vaccine uses lipid nanoparticles to encase the RNA. The nanoparticles are, basically, tiny greasy spheres that protect the mRNA and help it slide inside cells. Pfizer says it uses the four different lipids in a “defined ratio.”

  • (4-hydroxybutyl)azanediyl)bis(hexane-6,1-diyl)bis (ALC-3015)
  • (2- hexyldecanoate),2-[(polyethylene glycol)-2000]-N,N-ditetradecylacetamide (ALC-0159)
  • 1,2-distearoyl-snglycero-3-phosphocholine (DPSC)
  • Cholesterol

four different lipidsThe lipid ALC-0315 is the primary ingredient in the formulation. That’s because it’s ionizable—it can be given a positive charge, and since the RNA has a negative one, they stick together. It’s also a component that can cause side effects or allergic reactions.

The other lipids, one of which is the familiar molecule cholesterol, are “helpers” that give structural integrity to the nanoparticles or stop them from clumping. During manufacturing, the RNA and the lipids are stirred into a bubbly mix to form what the FDA describes as a “white to off-white” frozen liquid.

3 – Salts – The Pfizer vaccine contains four salts, one of which is ordinary table salt. Together, these salts are better known as phosphate-buffered saline, or PBS, a very common ingredient that keeps the pH, or acidity, of the vaccine close to that of a person’s body. You’ll understand how important that is if you’ve ever squeezed lemon juice on a cut. Substances with the wrong acidity can injure cells or get quickly degraded.

sugar acting as a cryoprotectant4 – Sugar – The vaccine includes sucrose – plain old sugar. In the Vaccine, It is acting as a cryoprotectant to safeguard the nanoparticles when they’re frozen and stop them from sticking together.

5 – Saline solution – Before injection, the vaccine is mixed with water containing sodium chloride, or ordinary salt, just as many intravenously delivered drugs are. Again, the idea is that the injection should more or less match the salt content of the blood.

6 – No preservatives – Pfizer makes a point of saying its mixture of lipid nanoparticles and mRNA is “preservative-free.” That’s because a preservative that’s been used in other vaccines, thimerosal (which contains mercury and is there to kill any bacteria that might contaminate a vial), has been at the center of social media posts claiming vaccines cause autism. The US Centers for Disease Control says thimerosal is safe; despite that, its use is being phased out. There is no thimerosal—or any other preservative—in the Pfizer vaccine. No microchips, either.

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To counter social media fake news that Bill Gates put tracking microchips in the shots, or that the vaccine contains luciferase, a glowing chemical from fireflies whose name makes some people think of the devil – Pfizer has delivered a vaccine and an “official vaccine ingredient list.”


Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Medicine Talks M2M

Medicine Talk M2MDon’t worry about Big Brother, it’s Big Pharma that gets the latest award for invading your space. Dailywireless.org reports that drugmaker Pfizer (PFE) wants to boost the profitability of its cholesterol-lowering Lipitor by calling you to nag remind you to take your medicine. According to Dailywireless.org if every Lipitor pill prescribed were taken, Pfizer expects that to increase its sales of the cholesterol-lowering drug by an extra $7 billion a year. Pfizer intends to use Vitality GlowCaps to grow its Lipitor business to $17 billion a year.

Pfizer logoVitality GlowCaps, are a wireless, Internet-connected bottle cap, that uses light and sound to alert users and phones home if they forget to take their medicine. Vitality and automated communication company Varolii, developed the GlowCap. The Glowcap has an embedded computer chip that communicates via low-frequency RF with a cellular-connected nightlight. The nightlight sends information to Vitality via a GE864-QUAD chip from Telit, a leader in the machine-to-machine (M2M) communications, over AT&T‘s (TGSM/GPRS network.

If a user misses a dose, an alarm will sound that gradually escalates “from a three-note arpeggio to an 11-note arpeggio,” Vitality President Josh Wachman told MobiHealthNews. The GlowCap can also flash a light, play a ringtone, send text messages or e-mails and even call the user’s mobile phone to remind them to take their medicine. The Dailywireless.org says that if the GlowCap remains unopened long enough, a patient will receive an automated call that asks a series of questions on why they didn’t take their medicine. GlowCaps also include a button that starts a call between the user’s phone and their pharmacy when the medication needs to be refilled.

Vitality GlowCapsVitality CEO David Rose told MobiHealthNews that the company was developing an iPad app for its pharma brand managers to help them track in real-time the success of their GlowCap programs. As part of the deal, Vitality gave away iPads to any GlowCap customer.  Mr. Rose said the freebies went to pharmacies and insurers. They distributed more than 10,000 GlowCaps to their customers. “With the secure app, they can see adherence patterns as they emerge, every day, in real-time. For example, they can see the total value higher adherence creates for the brand. The resulting cost-savings, in the case of insurers. Even how adherence varies by demographic slice or geography (media market),” Mr. Rose wrote.

The AT&T cellular-enabled GlowCaps which can be bought at CVS.com but no longer at Amazon.com comes with the night-light that connects wirelessly to AT&T’s cellular network, a bottle cap, and a six-month subscription to the service. After six months, subscriptions cost $15 a month.

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Talk about convergence! Mobile-to-Mobile + Connected health-care +Data protection. Any wonder why we need IPv6?

According to RCR Wireless, “Connected Healthcare” is a term used to describe a model for healthcare delivery that uses technology to give healthcare remotely. Connected healthcare is a sub-set of all Machine to Machine (M2M) devices which are expected to increase by 36 percent this year. Utilities, healthcare, and securities industries will lead the charge to a total of 2.1 billion “connected M2M devices” by 2020, according to research from Analsys Mason.

What do you think?

Does the idea of getting harassed by your own medicine sit well with you?

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.