A vaccine recently developed by the United States National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) is attempting to prepare the world for the next potential pandemic stemming from mosquito-borne diseases.
Prior to COVID-19 - the respiratory infection that has caused a global pandemic - overwhelming hospitals and healthcare systems across the world, diseases like Zika virus, West Nile and chikungunya took different parts of the world by surprise and have accounted for several fatalities. In India alone, mosquito-borne diseases accounted for 24,000 deaths in 2015, while as many as 435,000 deaths were reported in 2017 due from malaria in the country, according to data from the World Health Organization (WHO).
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Researchers at the NIAID, led by Dr. Jessica Manning, have come up with the concept of using the peptide in mosquito spit to develop immunity against it. This solution is being touted as a universal vaccine that could be the answer to all vector-borne diseases, whose observations were published in the scientific journal Lancet earlier this month, the first clinical trial of its kind.
When a mosquito bites a human being, it extracts blood and leaves some of its spit in the person’s blood system, containing the peptides which may have the presence of the disease.
Vector-borne diseases mean the pathogen relies on a vector - in this case a mosquito which doesn't cause the disease itself - to carry the pathogen from one host to infect another.
For decades, researchers have known the dangers mosquitoes posed to humanity as carriers of disease, but only recently started manipulating it in vaccinations. All the current vaccinations in place attempt to attack the pathogen to lessen or remove the impact of the infection on one’s immune system.