While the world heaved a sigh of relief when the first mRNA vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 emerged triumphant from clinical trials, their unprecedentedly wide and simultaneous use threw the spotlight on a rare but potentially dangerous side effect: inflammation of the heart. MEDICUS talked to Professor Peter Liu, the chief scientific officer and vice-president of research at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute, about the links between COVID, vaccines and heart inflammation as well as an exciting new research initiative that he’s spearheading as the director of Canada’s national C-CHANGE Initiative to harmonise and integrate heart and brain prevention and treatment guidelines. Liu was previously the scientific director of the federal health funding agency, the Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
MEDICUS: Welcome to Singapore. We’re delighted to speak with you. Researchers at Duke-NUS recently published a paper in Med documenting a case of heart inflammation, or myocarditis, following a COVID booster shot. But it is not just the vaccines that can cause heart inflammation, the virus itself can too. So, can you help tease apart the relationship between COVID, vaccines and myocarditis?
PETER LIU: I think there are two things that we learned during the pandemic: one is the fact that SARS-CoV-2 is not just a lung infection. It is a very important trigger of inflammatory responses in the vascular system, what we call endothelialitis, which is inflammation of the lining of the blood vessels. And that’s why we end up with complications, like early stroke, heart attacks in young people and myocarditis. And then in terms of long COVID, many of the symptoms, for example, tiredness, dizziness when we stand up, brain fog or even the loss of taste and smell, are likely related to small blood vessel inflammation around the nerves.
The second is that the vaccine has really transformed the face of the pandemic. mRNA vaccines are relatively new and when they were being rolled out, we discovered that young men, particularly between the age of 12 and 29, can have this rare complication of myocarditis. The fortunate thing is that we tracked a lot of these patients, so we know that most of them recover and that is important. And the frequency of myocarditis from the vaccine is less than the COVID-related myocarditis, so it’s way more beneficial to get the vaccine.
When we looked into this, we found evidence to suggest that a combination of things may lead to this. One is the fact that after vaccination, you get a huge rise of the spike protein, which is very similar to how the virus infects you. The other aspect is that some of the small particles, the lipid nanoparticles, probably exert some influence because the frequency of myocarditis between the Moderna and Pfizer vaccine is different. And, then, of course, there are genetic differences between individuals as well.
MEDICUS: We now have a window where SARS-CoV-2 continues to circulate but it no longer poses the same threat. Can we seize this opportunity to improve our vaccines, and perhaps better protect ourselves against coronaviruses?
PETER LIU: Yes, we are now looking at these components—what is it actually about the spike protein that triggers an inflammatory response? And what is it about these lipid nanoparticles that trigger a cardiovascular and immune response? So that we can figure out what is the combination that maximises efficacy without the risk.