Ebola vaccine
'promising' say scientists after human trial
The first human trial of an
experimental vaccine against Ebola suggests that it is safe and may help the
immune system to combat the virus.
Twenty volunteers were immunised in
the
The research is published in the New
England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).
None of those immunised suffered
major side-effects and all produced antibodies.
Dr Anthony Fauci of the NIH told the
BBC: "On safety and on the ability to produce an appropriate immune
response we can call this trial an unqualified success, even though it was an
early Phase One trial."
The volunteers were divided into two
groups, receiving either a low or high dose. The antibody response was
stronger among those receiving the higher dose.
The investigators found that seven
of the high dose and two of the lose dose volunteers produced T-cell immune
responses, which may be important in protection against Ebola viruses.
The vaccine uses a chimpanzee cold
virus which has been genetically engineered to carry a non-infectious Ebola
protein on its surface.
There are four trials underway of
this experimental vaccine.
The
Trials of a monovalent vaccine -
against the
If these also yield positive results
then the monovalent vaccine will be offered to thousands of health workers in
west Africa.
Dr Fauci said: "It will be this
large Phase Two / Three trial in west Africa which will show whether the
vaccine works and is really safe."
He added: "If the outbreak is
still is still going on six months from now and the vaccine at that point is
shown to be effective, it could have a very positive impact on the current
epidemic."
But he said the long-term aim was to
produce a vaccine which would protect against future outbreaks.
If the vaccine does work, it is
unclear how long the protection would last.
Indemnity agreement
These kinds of questions are usually
settled during the early stages of human trials.
But such is the pressing
humanitarian need for something which protects against Ebola, the whole trial
process is being accelerated at unprecedented speed.
In an editorial in the NEJM Dr
Daniel Bausch said that while the trial left many questions unanswered, an
Ebola vaccine was "one step closer".
The experimental vaccine is being
manufactured by the British drugs giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK).
The company says it can produce one
million doses a month by the end of 2015.
This will require a significant
financial outlay. It is asking for an indemnity agreement in case problems
such as unforeseen side effects were to emerge in the future.
GSK's chief executive Sir Andrew
Witty told the BBC: "We are not waiting for that to be settled [but] it
is obvious there are some risks that companies should not be expected to
carry on their own."
BBC
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Thứ Năm, 27 tháng 11, 2014
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