In 8 of 16 patients studied, the vaccines activated T cells that recognize the patient’s own pancreatic cancers. These patients also showed delayed recurrence of their pancreatic cancers, suggesting the T cells activated by the vaccines may be having the desired effect to keep pancreatic cancers in check.
Good news, but the headline lacks nuance.
Blatant skepticism replaced with cautious optimism
Yes, 16 people is not relevant enough for anything.
mRNA? Oh boy the anti vaxxers are going have have their heads explode.
Great news though as that’s a pretty common cancer.
Great news as it’s a cancer woth a really low survival rate
mRNA is going to go down in history as the most important medical breakthrough ever. It seems to not have limits
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Not all of them, but the most successful from Biontech/Pfizer and moderna are both mRNA based. However there were also others based on protein subunits or viral vectors for example.
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If your question is whether crispr gene editing was used by any of the vaccines, then no none of them used it as a direct mechanism.
However it might have been used somewhere along the line in their creation, e.g. to knock out a gene in the viral vectors. But i couldn’t tell you that with certainty.
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Yeah, the possibilities are definitely exciting. But i guess as far as Covid19 vaccines are concerned it was probably a good thing that none required their direct use. As is we already had a ton of missinformation and fearmongering, i don’t even want to imagine how bad it would have been, if gene editing was involved in any direct way.
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Crispr is not quite ready for prime time, but it’s promising.
Yes, mRNA was a huge breakthrough developed by the massive r&d rush from covid vaccine funding. Now we reap it’s benefits as it has a huge amount of applications on a lot of other things too.
Indeed they were.