Feature

COVID brings evolutionary virologists out of the shadows, into the fight


 

Evolution in medicine

Evolutionary virology and related research can be applied to medicine outside of the context of a global pandemic. “The principles and technical portions of evolutionary virology are very applicable to other diseases, including cancer,” Dr. Koonin said.

Viruses, bacteria, and cancer cells are all evolving systems. Viruses and bacteria are constantly evolving to thwart drugs and vaccines. How physicians and health care professionals practice medicine shapes the selection pressures driving how these pathogens evolve, Dr. Nelson said.

The rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a particularly relevant example of how evolution affects the way physicians treat patients. Having an evolutionary perspective can help inform how to treat patients most effectively, both for individual patients as well as for broader public health, she said.

“For a long time, there’s been a lot of interest in pathogen evolution that hasn’t translated so much into clinical practice,” said Dr. Nelson. “There’s been kind of a gulf between the research side of evolutionary virology and pathogen emergence and actual practice of medicine.”

As genomic sequencing has become faster and cheaper, that gulf has started to narrow, she said. As this technology continues to prove itself by, for example, tracking the evolution of one virus in real time, Dr. Nelson hopes there will be a positive snowball effect, leading to more attention, investment, and improvements in genomic data and that its use in epidemiology and medicine will expand going forward.

Bringing viral evolution studies more into medicine will require a mindset shift, Dr. Ogbunu said. Clinical practice is, by design, very focused on the individual patient. Evolutionary biology, on the other hand, deals with populations and probabilities.

Being able to engage with evolutionary biology would help physicians better understand disease and explain it to their patients, he said.

To start, Dr. Nelson recommended requiring at least one course in evolutionary biology or evolutionary medicine in medical school and crafting continuing education in this area for physicians. (Presentations at conferences could be one way to do this.)

Dr. Nelson also recommended deeper engagement and collaboration between physicians who collect samples from patients and evolutionary biologists who analyze genetic data. This would improve the quality of the data, the analysis, and the eventual findings that could be relevant to patients and clinical practice.

Still, “my first and inevitable reaction is I would so much rather prefer to exist in relative obscurity,” said Dr. Koonin, noting that the tragedy of the pandemic outweighs the advancements in the field.

Although there’s no going back to prepandemic times, there is an enormous opportunity in the aftermath of COVID to increase dialogue between physicians and evolutionary virologists to improve medical practice as well as public health.

Dr. Nelson summed it up: “Everything we uncover about these pathogens may help us prevent something like this again.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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