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 United States. Scientists at the US National Institutes
of Health (NIH) described the results as "promising".
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 US vaccine is
bivalent - aimed at giving protection against the Sudan and Zaire strains of
Ebola. It is the latter which is responsible for the current outbreak.
Trials of a
monovalent vaccine - against the Zaire strain - are also underway in Oxford,
Mali and Switzerland.
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.
Source; BBC
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