U.S. Starts Human Tests of
Avian Flu Vaccine
Reuters Health
March
24, 2005
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. health officials said on
Wednesday they have started human tests of a vaccine against avian flu,
which experts believe could kill tens of millions of people if it
becomes easily passed from person to person.
The vaccine, made by Sanofi Pasteur, will be tested
in 450 healthy adults in Rochester, New York; Baltimore and Los Angeles,
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said.
"While there have been relatively few cases worldwide
of H5N1 avian influenza infection in humans, the public health community
is concerned that the virus will develop the capability of efficiently
spreading from human to human and thus create a risk for a worldwide
pandemic," NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci said in a statement.
"The initiation of this vaccine trial marks a key
advance in our efforts to prepare to respond to an avian flu pandemic."
The vaccine is made from an inactivated H5N1 avian
flu virus isolated in 2004. The Phase I study is meant to test the
vaccine's safety - not whether it protects against the infection that
has wiped out millions of birds in Asia and killed dozens of people in
Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia since the end of 2003.
"If the vaccine is shown to be safe in adults, there
are plans to test it in other populations, such as the elderly and
children," the NIAID said.
"Between January 2004 and March 11, 2005, there were
69 confirmed cases of and 46 deaths from H5N1 infection in humans
reported to the World Health Organization," it added.
Normal influenza kills
between 250,000 and 500,000 people a year globally but avian flu could
be much deadlier.
It is unclear how high the fatality rate is, as
people have been found to be infected without serious symptoms, and
people who were believed to have died of other causes were later found
to have been infected with bird flu.
Usually, people catch the virus directly from
birds such as chickens or ducks. Geese and wild birds and mammals
such as cats can also carry the virus.
"To date, there has been a small number of cases
where human-to-human transmission of the virus may have occurred.
However, public health experts fear that the virus may evolve into one
that is more easily transmitted between people," the NIAID said.
"If this were to happen, a worldwide pandemic could
follow."
Chiron Corp. of Emeryville, California, also has a
U.S. government contract to make an H5N1 bird flu vaccine.
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