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reports that there is no vaccine on the world market to protect against the
deadly Ebola virus, but experts say the fast-growing outbreak in West Africa is
speeding efforts to test one.
Meanwhile , Governor Willie Obiano
of Anambra state today at August meeting flag of assured that the state is
ready to contain any emergency of Ebola as it has set machinery in motion to
nip its outbreak in the bud.
The first attempts to develop a
vaccine for the hemorrhagic fever began shortly after it first emerged in 1976,
but lack of funding from the pharmaceutical industry has long stalled these
efforts, according to scientists.
Next month, the US government’s National
Institutes of Health plan to start an early, phase I study in humans of a
vaccine candidate that has shown promise in tests on monkeys.
“We are starting to discuss some
deals with pharmaceutical companies to help scale it up on an emergency basis,”
said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases.
“It might be available in 2015 for
health workers who are putting themselves at extreme risk.”
Meanwhile, West Africa is facing the
largest outbreak of Ebola in history, which is crippling the region’s health
care system and outpacing containment efforts.
The virus causes fever, vomiting,
diarrhea and bleeding. It has killed around 60 percent of those infected since
March, and taken more than 700 lives.
Ebola can be fatal within a week of
the first sign of symptoms, and can spread among the living like “forest fire,”
the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have warned.
- No commercial market -
In the past, the prospect of victims
numbering in the thousands in the developing world has failed to entice drug
companies to invest in a vaccine for Ebola.
“With outbreaks occurring
(sporadically), affecting usually a small number of people in Central Africa,
there is no real commercial market” for Ebola vaccines, wrote Andrea Marzi and
Heinz Feldmann of NIAID virology laboratory in an April scientific article
giving an overview of vaccine approaches to date.
Nevertheless, “several of the
vaccine platforms are ready for clinical trials,” they wrote.
Some of these vaccines have already
shown 80 to 90 percent effectiveness in tests on monkeys, and none have had
life-threatening side effects, said Cambridge University lecturer Peter Walsh.
But the process has been complicated
by regulators who say trying an unproven vaccine on humans would be unethical.
“This argument — that it is
unethical to use non-licensed vaccines — is just crazy,” Walsh told AFP, adding
that the vaccine NIAID is working on has already been a decade in the making.
“The ethical thing to do is to treat
them, to vaccinate them (in West Africa). It is a no-brainer. It is scandalous
that we are not doing that.”
- Logistical issues -
Even if an experimental vaccine or
treatment were to be doled out in the affected countries — Guinea, Liberia,
Nigeria and Sierra Leone — plenty of questions remain about how it would be
distributed, and to whom.
Marzi and Feldmann said in their
paper that Ebola outbreaks, or bioterrorism, would demand “ring vaccination and
protection of local medical personnel and other high-risk exposure groups, such
as family members.”
Such a strategy demands an
immunization that is fast-acting and easy to deliver, and one that is available
in large dose amounts from industry or federal stockpiles.
This raises even more questions
about whether a vaccine can help, said Herve Raoul, a leading expert on
pathogens and research director at the French Institute of Health and Medical
Research (INSERM).
“A vaccine is only effective after a
certain period, generally at least three weeks prior to exposure,” he told AFP.
“The ideal thing today would be to
develop an antiviral drug that would help sick people get through the most
acute phase of the illness.”
However, there is currently no such
medication in the pipeline to treat Ebola.
In the meantime, experts can only
urge preventive measures, including isolating infected patients, taking special
precautions to avoid contact with bodily fluids and swiftly burying the dead.
Walsh said he was hopeful that the
ongoing outbreak will lead to changes in the status quo when it comes to drug
development for diseases like Ebola.
“The way things happen is in a
crisis,” he said.
“When something nasty happens, it is
an opportunity to do something that otherwise would not be politically
possible.”
WASHINGTON
(AFP)
Ebola Outbreak Speeds Up Efforts To Find A Vaccine, As Obiano Assures State Is Ready
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Friday, August 01, 2014
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