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Bird Flu Vaccine Made From Cells Looks Promising
TRENTON, NJ (AP) - The first experimental bird flu vaccine made from lab-grown
cells instead of chicken eggs shows promise in blocking the highly lethal virus,
scientists report.
The advance is good news not just for preparations in case of a pandemic,
but also because it offers a way to make shots for seasonal flu much faster.
That
gives health officials crucial extra time to better match annual shots to the
flu strains circulating.
It also would reduce dependence on the antiquated system of using millions
of eggs to make flu vaccines and could cut production time roughly in half,
to as
little as 12 weeks, according to maker Baxter International Inc.
Results of mid-stage testing of the Baxter vaccine, Celvapan, showed two
shots produced an immune response considered strong enough to protect 76 percent
of healthy adults from both the H5N1 Vietnam strain it targets and the related
Hong
Kong strain; it appeared to protect 45 percent from a third, Indonesian strain.
“
I think it is a big leap forward,” said Dr. Wilbur Chen, a vaccine researcher
at the University of Maryland School of Medicine not involved in the study.
In the half-century-old egg method, virus samples are injected into hundreds
of millions of specialized eggs and incubated. The egg fluids are later harvested,
concentrated and purified into the vaccine.
With cell technology, small amounts of virus are put in large fermenting
tanks with nutrients and cells derived from monkey kidneys, and the virus multiplies.
Then the virus is inactivated, purified and put into vaccine vials.
Since the first outbreak in Hong Kong in 1997, more than 240 people in Asia,
Europe and Africa have died from bird flu, which kills about two-thirds of
people infected. Nearly all had close contact with poultry, but scientists
worry bird
flu could mutate to a form easily spread among people, who have no natural
immunity. Many experts believe a pandemic will eventually occur.
The United States has stockpiled 23 million doses of egg-based human bird
flu vaccine made by three companies; some European countries also have such
stockpiles
and are ordering Baxter’s cell-based vaccine.
Other human vaccines - a few using cells or genetic engineering but most
made from eggs - are being tested in dozens of government and commercial projects.
Baxter officials say theirs is the first produced in cells that’s been
tested in people, and they expect to get a European Union license for Celvapan
around year’s end.
A total of 275 volunteers in Austria and Singapore got one of four doses.
The best results - the 76 percent protection - came from the second-lowest
dose.
That dose also proved effective in a final-stage test last year of 550 volunteers
in Austria and Germany, according to Dr. Harmut Ehrlich, head of research and
development for Baxter’s Vienna-based Bioscience unit. It protected 73
percent of adults under 60 and 74 percent of those over 60 from the Vietnam strain.
It was less effective against the Indonesian strain and wasn’t tested
against the older Hong Kong one.
To measure effectiveness, volunteers’ blood is tested to see how well
the new antibodies they developed kill the virus.
Dr. William Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University infectious disease specialist,
said researchers need to keep working to make a better vaccine but Baxter’s
got “pretty darn good results” at low doses.
“
I’m excited about this, but we have not yet reached the finish line,” he
said.
In the United States, the Department of Health and Human Services has invested
$1.5 billion in research on cell-based seasonal and pandemic flu vaccines.
Two cell culture vaccines for seasonal flu are licensed in Europe, said Marie-Paule
Keny, director of the World Health Organization’s vaccine research program.
But full development of the technology could still take a few years, she said.
Experts said Baxter’s vaccine appears to work better than egg-based
ones, but cautioned that lab results from different companies are hard to compare.
Linda Lambert, chief of the respiratory diseases branch at the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the Baxter vaccine’s protection
against multiple strains could be important if a pandemic is caused by a strain
other than H5N1.
“
If another pops up, we’ll know what to do,” based on what Baxter
and other researchers have been learning, she said.
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