COVID-19: to vaccinate or not to vaccinate – that is the question.
Authors:
Jiří Městecký 1,2; Milan Raška 1,3
Authors‘ workplace:
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama, Birmingham, USA
1; Laboratoř buněčné a molekulární imunologie, Mikrobiologický ústav AV ČR, v. v. i., Praha
2; Ústav imunologie LF UP a FN Olomouc
3
Published in:
Čas. Lék. čes. 2024; 163: 131-136
Category:
Review Articles
Overview
SARS-CoV-2 is a virus which infects the respiratory tract and may cause severe, occasionally life-threatening disease COVID-19. In more than 5% of symptomatic patients the infection is associated with post-acute symptoms. The initial contact of the virus with the immune system of the nasopharynx and oropharynx induces a mucosal immune response manifested by the production of secretory IgA (sIgA) antibodies which may contribute to the restriction of the infection to the upper respiratory tract and an asymptomatic or clinically mild disease.
The current systemically administered vaccines protected against the severe COVID-19 infection and its post-acute sequelae. However, they do not induce antibodies in mucosal secretions in SARS-CoV-2-naive individuals. In contrast, in those who previously experienced mucosal infection, systemically administered vaccines may stimulate sIgA production.
The clinical benefit of systemic vaccination convincingly documented in tens of millions of individuals overshadows the rare, sometimes controversial reports of complications encountered after vaccination. The inability of current SARS-CoV-2 vaccines to induce mucosal immune responses and to prevent the spreading of the virus by external secretions demonstrates the mutual independence of mucosal and systemic compartments of the immune system, and thus emphasizes need for the development of vaccines inducing protective immune responses in both compartments.
Keywords:
COVID-19; vaccination; mucosal immunity, mucosal vaccines
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