First off, a note that posting will be a bit irregular this week, but I wanted to let people know that I'm definitely still around! So here's something to talk about:
There's a good new paper in JAMA Internal Medicine looking at a large recent data set in Covid-19 vaccinations in an older population. It's from the Veterans Administration, looking at about one million veterans who got a flu vaccine in 2024, and over three hundred thousand of them also got a coronavirus vaccine. Following up on these cohorts, the authors find that there was a 38% reduction in coronovirus-related major cardiovascular events in that latter vaccinated category, which is very nice to see. Even more interesting is that there was a 24% decrease in all-causes cardiovascular events (that is, including patients who were never diagnosed with a coronavirus infection during this period. That's quite impressive - comparable to the benefits of statins in at-risk patients (and it should be noted at the same time that the effects of statin therapy in otherwise healthy older patients do not seem to be particularly meaningful, although debate continues on that question).
As this excellent overview at Stat details, the most likely explanation for these numbers is a significant undercount of how many of these patients were actually infected with the coronavirus. But that's worth thinking about, too, because that leads one to the idea that many of them may have not felt all that sick (and never bothered getting tested for the virus as a result) but still had enough of an infection to raise their risk of cardiovascular trouble. And that makes a case for really getting those vaccination numbers up higher - the estimate from the paper's authors is the possible avoidance of 3,500 major cardiovascular events per million patients vaccinated in this population.
As the Stat article correctly says, this might surprise some people who associated the coronavirus vaccines (particularly the mRNA ones) with the side effect of myocarditis (particularly in young men). And that's a real finding - the vaccine did produce this in a small number of patients. But (and I've said this before), you know what gives people mycarditis at a significantly greater rate and in greater severity when it does occur, and not just in young men? Yeah: getting infected with the coronavirus. So it's still a very good tradeoff, and in this older population it's almost certainly an even better deal.
This will not sit well with the people who believe that the mRNA coronavirus shots have ravaged the world's population and are the cause of a whole list of diseases (cardiovascular death being a prominent one, for sure). You don't have to go far to find these folks - heck, some of them will be showing up in the comments to this post once they become aware of it, although I (as has been the policy here since the worst days of the pandemic) will not even let the most scurrilous of these even publish to the comments section in the first place. The signal/noise of the world is not improved by several paragraphs of poorly punctuated ranting about secret depopulation experiments, 5G nanobots, irreversible changes that make vaccine recipients subhuman and thus put the few, the brave, who haven't been vaccinated in the position of the Last Pure Humans on Planet Earth, and on and on. Nope, there's plenty of that crap out there already and I see no need to give it a platform here.
But the irony is rather thick: coronavirus vaccines not only keep people out of the hospital with severe viral infections - a fact that has been irrefutably proven in many large studies - but also help to keep elderly patients from dying of major cardiac events. Add that to the mounting evidence that the shingles vaccine helps to prevent dementia in these same age groups, and the recommendation has to be that older patients should be getting vaccinated far more often than they do. I'm not quite 65 yet, but I have taken all of these shots and will continue to get the updated coronavirus ones as they become available. Because I really think that it would be irresponsible to do otherwise.
So now that you have a new cardiovascular drug, how do you make it for the hoped-for large patient population when it looks like, well, that thing to the right? That’s quite the multicyclic peptide, and while a lot of the key bond formations are good ol’ amide couplings, you have several that are not. The team divided up the molecules into “Western”, “Eastern”, and “Northern” pieces (based on the three macrocycles in the final structure) and demonstrated that they could make all of these in crystalline form (thus obviating the need for chromatographic purification). The Northern one was the toughest by far, with three unnatural amino acids and a choice of amine nucleophiles.


