Diabetes vaccine in the horizon

Let’s face is, vaccines are the scientific discovery of the century. When in the past people would die from common illnesses like whooping cough, today, vaccines save millions of lives by helping the body fend off viral and bacterial diseases. In fact, thanks to vaccines, one disease has been eradicated: smallpox.

To date, over 80 FDA-approved vaccines exist in the market, with many more in development. They provide immunity to diseases like whooping cough, tetanus, polio, chicken pox, hepatitis, among many others. They are clearly a brilliant development in the scientific community.

Wouldn’t it be great if there was a vaccine for type 1 diabetes?

This dream may soon become a reality thanks to the many scientists studying and developing vaccines.
There are two vaccines being developed to prevent type 1 diabetes. The first consists of bacillus Calmette-Guérin, or BCG. This drug is used as treatment for many conditions, including bladder cancer and the tuberculosis vaccine. In 2012, a research showed that BCG could aid patients with type 1 diabetes. Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital found that when mice were treated with a BCG vaccine, it raise their tumor necrosis factor (TNF). TNF has the capability of killing the cells that destroy the insulin producing cells in the body, effectively preventing type 1 diabetes. This vaccine is being tested on its effects on humans. Debise Faustman, the leader of this study is hopeful.
The second vaccine in development is led by Dr. Mohamed Husseiny Elsayed from the Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope in Duarte, California. The drug, based on salmonella, was also tested in mice. The effect seen in mice was positive, and not only did it counteract diabetes type 1, it also normalized the mice’s glucose tolerance. Elsayed considers the vaccine “a very safe and targeted immunotherapy.”
With all these and more impressive advances in medical research, maybe diabetes will be eradicated like smallpox.