Learned lesson from COVID-19: can routine immunizations be the first line of defense against the next pandemic?

  • AbdelMassih A
  • Gaber H
  • El Shershaby M
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background: Single-cell sequencing studies on the lung microenvironment have revealed that the outcome of COVID-19 depends largely on the immune system response rather than the viral load. A robust innate immune response and a regulated adaptive immunity can prevent the worst outcomes such as hospitalization and the need for mechanical ventilation. Main body: Intriguingly, several vaccines pertaining to the routine vaccination schedule, not only BCG, can skew the immune response towards the aforementioned beneficial effects. Short conclusion: This means that routine immunization not only can help in the current pandemic but can also offer a rapid rescue in the subsequent epidemics or pandemics until a vaccine is developed.Copyright © 2022, The Author(s).

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AbdelMassih, A., Gaber, H., El Shershaby, M., Hanafy, M., Omar, Y., Husseiny, R., … Fouda, R. (2022). Learned lesson from COVID-19: can routine immunizations be the first line of defense against the next pandemic? Egyptian Pediatric Association Gazette, 70(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s43054-022-00105-2

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