key: cord-0760964-cy2i40py authors: Abbas, Ahmed M.; AbouBakr, Asmaa; Bahaa, Nermeen; Michael, Sherry; Ghobrial, Marco; AbuElmagd, Mai E.; Ahmed, Omar A.; AbdelWahab, Radwa A.; Shaltout, Asmaa S. title: The effect of BCG vaccine in the era of COVID‐19 pandemic date: 2020-07-22 journal: Scand J Immunol DOI: 10.1111/sji.12947 sha: eeb79f014d78ae044b0cd4dbf2335713fc389d10 doc_id: 760964 cord_uid: cy2i40py Coronavirus Disease‐2019 (COVID‐19) has become a worldwide emergency and announced as a pandemic recently with variable incidence and mortality in different geographical areas. The relationship between COVID‐19 and Bacille Calmette Guérin (BCG) vaccine is still under investigation, and we aim to clarify this matter. BCG is a live attenuated tuberculosis vaccine. BCG vaccination of adult humans induces strained circulating monocytes having an increase in their capacity to produce proinflammatory cytokines. This effect translates to non‐specific protection against unrelated pathogens, an example of which is S. aureus and C. Albicans. Also, vaccination of BCG of healthy volunteers showed an increase in the capacity of natural killer (NK) cells to secrete proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL‐1β and IL‐6 after stimulation with M. tuberculosis or unrelated pathogens (S. aureus, C. Albicans). BCG is a live attenuated tuberculosis vaccine. BCG vaccination of adult humans induces strained circulating monocytes having an increase in their capacity to produce proinflammatory cytokines. 2 This effect translates to non-specific protection against unrelated pathogens, an example of which is S. aureus and C. Albicans. Also, vaccination of BCG of healthy volunteers showed an increase in the capacity of natural killer (NK) cells to secrete proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL-1β and IL-6 after stimulation with M. tuberculosis or unrelated pathogens (S. aureus, C. Albicans). 3 Therefore, BCG induces non-specific protection against unrelated pathogens. 4 In trained immunity, the human immune cells experience metabolic and epigenetic changes that strengthen the immune response to heterologous reinfection. Therefore, BCG vaccine may play a role in the COVID-19 pandemic. 5 BCG vaccine is given at birth or/and during childhood induces a long-lasting immunity not only against tuberculosis (TB), but also against other infections. It has had a successful outcome in the treatment of TB and other lung diseases as it decreases mortality by the protection against respiratory infections and neonatal sepsis. BCG causes an epigenetic modification of the monocyte immune cells, which may anticipate protection against COVID-19. Relative to countries with compulsory BCG vaccination protocol and countries without, low rates of COVID-19 related deaths are recorded in countries with BCG vaccination policy compared to other countries. 6 This may be due to the so-called herd immunity under which the virus cannot spread among people. 7 Apart from the use of the BCG vaccine for the prophylaxis of TB and against leprosy, it has demonstrated efficacy in patients with various diseases, including viral infections, autoimmune This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved diseases, superficial bladder cancer, and oral aphthous ulcers. 8 This is explained by the immune response mediated by BCG vaccination, which shows cross-antigenicity. Therefore, a combination of oral zinc sulfate, which enhances the immune response against many diseases, and BCG vaccination, will help improve the protection from various infections including COVID-19, especially in countries where the policy of universal BCG vaccination is already applied. 8 Previous studies assumed that there is no noteworthy correlation between BCG vaccination coverage and COVID-19 case-fatality rate among the countries with universal BCG vaccination policy 9 . Statistical studies showed confusion about the value of BCG vaccine in COVID-19 pandemic. One study showed that mean of cases per population ratio is statistically significantly lower in 138 BCG vaccinated countries versus 37 BCG-non-vaccinated countries. 10 A systemic review showed that countries with no policy of BCG vaccination, such as Italy and USA, showed higher mortality associated with COVID-19 than countries with long-standing BCG vaccination policies, such as South Korea and Japan. 11 However , another recent study among those who were born in israel before and after the time of policy of BCG vaccination showed no statistically significant difference in the proportion of positive COVID-19 cases among the BCG-vaccinated group [11.7%] vs. the unvaccinated group [10.4%]. 12 Another regression analysis showed no actual relationship between BCG vaccination and reduced cases of severe COVID-19. 13 As a limitation, all previous studies are observational and no completed clinical trials up till now to confirm or exclude the hypothesis. However, there are ongoing clinical trials investigating the safety and efficacy of BCG vaccine for health care workers in prophylaxis against In conclusion, the BCG vaccine could have a protective role against COVID-19 with lower mortality rates in already infected patients. However, further clinical trials are recommended to prove that. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and corona virus disease-2019 (COVID-19): the epidemic and the challenges Accepted Article This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved Bacille Calmette-Guerin induces NOD2-dependent non-specific protection from reinfection via epigenetic reprogramming of monocytes Whole blood profiling of bacillus Calmette-Guérin-induced trained innate immunity in infants identifies epidermal growth factor, IL-6, plateletderived growth factor-AB/BB, and natural killer cell activation BCG-induced cross-protection and development of trained immunity. Implication for vaccine design COVID-19 vaccination clinical trials should consider multiple doses of BCG Is global BCG vaccination-induced trained immunity relevant to the progression of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic? Mandated Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination predicts flattened curves for the spread of COVID-19. medRxiv BCG is a Good Immunotherapeutic Agent for Viral and Autoimmune Diseases: Is it a New Weapon against Coronavirus (COVID-19)? BCG Vaccination Policy and Protection Against COVID-19 Is BCG vaccination affecting the spread and severity of COVID-19? Allergy Could BCG be used to protect against COVID-19? SARS-CoV-2 Rates in BCG-Vaccinated and Unvaccinated Young Adults Is BCG vaccination causally related to reduced COVID-19 mortality? The authors state that there are no conflicts of interest.