4.7 Review

Smarter cures to combat COVID-19 and future pathogens: a review

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 2759-2771

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10311-021-01224-9

Keywords

Coronavirus; SARS-CoV-2; Microbial resistance; Immunotherapy; Probiotics; Immune system

Funding

  1. Young Talent Support Plan of Xi'an Jiaotong University
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51888103]

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Prevention is better than cure. The emergence of epidemics and pandemics caused by the transmission of pathogens from animals to humans in the past two decades, especially COVID-19, has highlighted the limitations of traditional solutions and the need for more intelligent, cheaper, and preventive therapies to combat future pandemics.
Prevention is better than cure. A milestone of the anthropocene is the emergence of a series of epidemics and pandemics often characterized by the transmission of a pathogen from animals to human in the past two decades. In particular, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has made a profound impact on emergency responding and policy-making in a public health crisis. Classical solutions for controlling the virus, such as travel restrictions, lockdowns, repurposed drugs and vaccines, are socially unpopular and medically limited by the fast mutation and adaptation of the virus. This is exacerbated by microbial resistance to therapeutic drugs and the slowness of vaccine development. In other words, microbial pathogens are somehow 'smarter' and faster than us, thus calling for more intelligent cures to combat future pandemics. Here, we compare therapeutics for COVID-19 such as synthetic drugs, vaccines, antibodies and phages. We present the strength and limitations of antibiotic and antiviral drugs, vaccines, and antibody-based therapeutics. We describe smarter, cheaper and preventive cures such as bacteriophages, food medicine using probiotics and prebiotics, sports, healthy diet, music, yoga, Tai Chi, dance, reading, knitting, cooking and outdoor activities. Some of these preventive cures have been intuitively developed since thousands of years ago, as illustrated by the fascinating similarity of the Chinese characters for 'music' and 'herbal medicine.'

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