Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The long war against flu. Nature

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The long war against flu. Nature

    The long war against flu

    Editorial - Nature 454, 137 (10 July 2008) | doi:10.1038/454137a; Published online 9 July 2008

    That the H5N1 strain of bird flu has not yet caused a pandemic is no cause for complacency. Preparations for the inevitable must be redoubled to mitigate the potential devastation.

    Five years after the deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus exploded into a global epidemic in birds, it has infected more than 300 people.

    Happily, it has not yet evolved into a strain that can transmit easily between humans ? an event that would trigger a pandemic that could kill tens of millions.

    But as long as H5N1 continues to be present in animals, that risk persists.

    And with so many other flu strains out in the world, all constantly evolving, a flu pandemic is inevitable.

    This grim reality has spurred basic research into topics such as the 1918 flu virus, cell-receptor biology and evolutionary dynamics, which are collectively yielding insights into the molecular basis of virulence and how viruses adapt to humans.

    Researchers have also begun to unravel the often fatal clinical events caused by the virus, such as the massive immune response that is a 'cytokine storm', and cell-culture technology is promising to make vaccines available more quickly.

    Plans by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Wellcome Trust and the Pasteur Institute to roadmap this research should help focus priorities for funding, just as similar work has done for neglected diseases.

    But improved control measures, especially for H5N1 itself, and public-health infrastructure are our frontline defences against a pandemic.

    Unfortunately, the overall control picture is bleak.

    Thailand, Vietnam and China have notched up successes in curbing outbreaks in birds, which is key to minimizing the chance that the virus can pass to humans.

    But South Korea had its worst outbreak ever in April, and the disease has become endemic in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Egypt.

    Eradication now seems impossible, and the task of containing the virus has become chronic and costly.

    Many countries have made patchy progress in planning how to mitigate a pandemic once it does break out.

    True, any such plan can only buy time, by using antiviral drugs and restricting movement, until a vaccine is available for the specific strain that has broken out.

    The Commentary on page 162 endorses what might be an intriguing adjunct: 'pre-pandemic' vaccines, which would be matched not to the exact pandemic strain, but to earlier variants.

    Even if these vaccines were only partly effective, advocates argue, they might confer sufficient protection to prevent death or severe disease.

    Although this idea is untested, it merits consideration ? especially as strain-specific vaccines would be available only several months into the pandemic, and even then would be in very short supply.

    The World Health Organization is planning to stockpile more than 100 million doses of pre-pandemic vaccines, and some nations, including Japan, are considering the same.

    Even if H5N1 never evolves into a pandemic strain, it serves as a useful wake-up call.

    But delivering sufficient perfectly matched pandemic vaccine fast enough to make a difference is the critical issue.

    One promising approach ? equipping vaccines with adjuvants that boost their effect, reducing the amount of antigen needed in each dose ? is belatedly getting the attention it deserves.

    Indeed, research is generating vaccine formulations that need so little antigen that timely doses could, in principle, be provided for everyone on Earth using existing plant capacity.

    Rapid delivery will require an unprecedented level of international coordination.

    Plans should be in place so that when a pandemic strikes clinical trials of the strain-specific vaccine begin ? as do the manufacture and distribution of the billions of syringes needed to deliver it.

    There should also be international mechanisms to ensure that developing countries have access to pandemic and pre-pandemic vaccines at low cost.

    Surveillance, control of disease in animals, pandemic planning and vaccines ? each requires intense, organized and sustained commitment.

    Even if H5N1 never evolves into a pandemic strain, it serves as a useful wake-up call, revealing just how much more must be done to be better prepared for the inevitable.
    -

    ------

  • #2
    Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

    Nature 454, 162 (10 July 2008) | <ABBR title="Digital Object Identifier">doi</ABBR>:10.1038/454162a; Published online 9 July 2008

    Ready for avian flu?

    Tadataka Yamada<SUP>1</SUP>, Alice Dautry<SUP>2</SUP> & Mark Walport<SUP>3</SUP>
    1. <LI id=a1>Tadataka Yamada is the executive director of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's Global Health Program, 1551 Eastlake Avenue East, Seattle, Washington 98102, USA. <LI id=a2>Alice Dautry is director general, Pasteur Institute, 25?28 rue du Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris, France.
    2. Mark Walport is director of the Wellcome Trust, Gibbs Building 215 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE, UK.


    Top of page Abstract

    Committing to a vaccine stockpile is just the beginning. Tadataka Yamada, Alice Dautry and Mark Walport offer a roadmap for heading off a global avian influenza catastrophe.

    V. GHIRDA/AP
    Vaccines: still the best defence against avian flu.

    Several chilling considerations highlight the seriousness of an impending pandemic of the H5N1 'avian' influenza virus. The highly contagious nature of influenza, the limited ability to restrict its transmission and the efficiency of modern international transport all conspire to reduce the time from the first infection to a potential global crisis. Recent models built on data from the 1918 flu pandemic predict that 50 million?80 million people could die<SUP>1</SUP>. Perhaps not surprisingly, 95% of these deaths are likely to occur in the developing world, where higher population density, poor health status and limited access to public-health interventions prevail. Prevention through vaccination would be optimal, but vaccines against a pandemic strain might take six months to manufacture and deliver, even in developed countries. Moreover, total global capacity for flu vaccine manufacture in the first 12 months is estimated at only 500 million doses, and no global financing-vehicle exists.
    There is some good news. The World Health Organization (WHO) has announced plans to stockpile H5 influenza vaccine and several manufacturers have already offered to contribute. Other manufacturers are supportive but await details before committing. Efforts have been initiated by the WHO to create a policy framework for vaccine allocation and recommendations for its use. An ethics framework, and financing, regulatory and distribution systems will also have to be developed with member states.
    Several recent developments make this stockpile feasible. H5N1 vaccines with adjuvants that reduce the required dose as much as fourfold have been developed<SUP>2</SUP> and one has been licensed for medical use. Furthermore, the manufacturing capacity of 500 million doses is calculated on a requirement for three strains of flu virus for standard vaccinations; in crisis mode, three times as much monovalent pandemic flu vaccine could be produced. Together, these considerations could increase global vaccine production capacity to 5 billion?6 billion doses over 12 months. Moreover, adjuvant-enhanced vaccines may provide cross-protection against strains that have undergone up to seven years of genetic drift<SUP>3</SUP>. If this is true, appropriate planning, manufacture and stockpiling of currently effective vaccines might provide the basis for an immediate response to an H5N1 outbreak.
    But this is not the time to be complacent. Our organizations, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Pasteur Institute and the Wellcome Trust, are now planning, with major medical-research funders and other stakeholders, several projects to enhance the research effort and reduce the risks from the threat of pandemic influenza over coming decades. In the next 18 months we will develop, maintain and disseminate a central inventory of funded research activities that are relevant to human influenza to ensure that stakeholders are well-informed. We will also coordinate roadmapping exercises to identify knowledge gaps. These will assist funders and researchers in establishing research-funding priorities, with specific focus on vaccines, drug therapies and epidemiology/population science (for example, diagnostics, surveillance, transmission and modelling). The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust will collaborate to fund these activities.
    These two programmes will enable the development of a cohesive health-research agenda for pandemic influenza. In addition, we call on the wider community to focus on the following challenges.
    Resolve intellectual-property claims

    We, as a community, must be transparent and open in sharing information, reagents, viral strains and scientific know-how to conduct and advance the best science and rapidly create the most effective pandemic vaccines. We must ensure that intellectual property concerns in either the developing or the developed world do not stand in the way of effective solutions.
    Coordinate stockpiling efforts

    We must seize the opportunity afforded by emerging science to mobilize the global capacity to manufacture an effective 'pre-pandemic' H5-vaccine stockpile with novel vaccines currently under evaluation. Although the capacity to manufacture pandemic flu vaccines is large, we must continue to supply standard seasonal flu vaccine to those at risk.
    Consider all costs

    We must make sure that all people from all nations will benefit from stockpiling, while ensuring fair financing. This implies a tiered-pricing model across countries. Careful consideration must also be given to providing adequate protection for health providers and manufacturers against costs of claims for unpredictable side-effects of vaccination.
    Initiate a funding mechanism

    Even at the lowest prices it will be difficult for many nations to meet the needs of their people. Public and private donors must create a financing facility to help the poorest nations pay for their share of the pandemic flu vaccine. Donors have funded financing mechanisms, such as the Geneva-based GAVI Alliance, which supports the purchase of childhood vaccines, to address other urgent health challenges.
    Bolster surveillance

    We must build robust mechanisms; for surveillance of an outbreak of pandemic flu and for delivering prevention and treatment, particularly vaccines, as quickly and broadly as possible. There must be full integration of vaccine strategies with other approaches, and we must coordinate research strategies for dealing with zoonotic and human influenza infections.
    Advances in science and society can help prevent disaster if we resolve to act collectively.

    See Editorial, page 137. To discuss this article online visit http://tinyurl.com/625swp.
    Top of page References
    1. <LI id=B1><!-- . -->Murray, C. J., Lopez, A. D., Chin, B., Feehan, D. & Hill, K. H. Lancet 368, 2211?2218 (2006). | Article | PubMed | ISI | <LI id=B2><!-- . -->Leroux-Roels, I. et al. Lancet 370, 580?589 (2007). | Article | PubMed | ChemPort |
    2. <!-- . -->Stephenson, I. et al. J. Infect. Dis. 191, 1210?1215 (2005). | Article | PubMed | ISI |

    Top of page Competing interests statement

    The authors declare competing financial interests.

    Top of page

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

      who is this "editorial" ?
      I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
      my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

        Originally posted by gsgs View Post
        who is this "editorial" ?
        Nature

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

          Commentary

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

            Whatever happened to bird flu?

            The media frenzy over bird flu has receded, but the threat of a global epidemic still looms large.

            Declan Butler

            Is bird flu affecting fewer people now?

            Yes and no. The 88 cases and 59 deaths reported last year are lower than the 2006 peak of 115 cases and 79 deaths, when the virus first arrived in Turkey and Egypt and sparked a large number of cases there. Thirty four cases have been reported so far this year.

            Vietnam, Thailand and China ? the only countries to report cases from 2003?04 during the current epidemic ? have made progress in controlling the spread of the virus in poultry. Once major hotspots, all three countries have consequently seen a significant drop in human cases.

            But cases have since cropped up in 12 other countries, with Indonesia leading at 135 cases ? more than one-third of the worldwide total of 385.

            A major worry is that Bangladesh, which reported its first human case in May, might go the way of Indonesia because the virus is firmly established in the country's poultry.

            The apparent current downturn in cases could be short-lived.

            What is the situation in poultry?
            Although some countries are making progress controlling the disease, the prospects are bleak. Experts are now convinced that the disease has become endemic in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Egypt, making eradication impossible.

            That makes it inevitable that outbreaks will continue elsewhere as the poultry trade helps to spread the virus.

            In 2007, outbreaks in poultry or wildlife were reported in 28 countries. Twenty two countries have reported outbreaks this year, with South Korea having its worst outbreak ever in April. Sixty one countries have now been affected, and the H5N1 virus remains a major threat to agriculture and food supply, and to human health.

            Short-term fire-fighting tactics are now evolving into long-term efforts, including restructuring trade and farming practices.

            "Acceptance that the viruses will not be eradicated does not mean complacency ? it is a dose of reality. But it also takes the disease out of the headlines," says Les Sims, a consultant for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

            "If governments are to tackle these issues, long-term donor support is needed. Unfortunately, long-term programmes may prove less appealing to donors than emergency activities, especially if the disease is no longer front-page news."

            One problem is that most countries don't have systems for rapidly incorporating new antigens into vaccines, making current poultry vaccines in high-risk areas increasingly ineffective.

            Might bird flu still reach the Americas?
            Yes. That it hasn't already is mostly down to good luck, and relative geographic isolation. If it enters the Americas it could be a disaster for the food industry in Latin America ? Brazil is the largest producer of poultry.

            If the risks are still there, why has the media largely gone quiet?
            Media coverage of avian flu peaked from mid-2005 to mid-2006. That was when H5N1 avian flu erupted out of Asia, spread across Russia, and fanned out into Europe and Africa.

            Although bird flu has since faded from the front pages, media coverage in fact remains sustained and high, as can be seen from a timeline search of the Google News archive.

            What's being done to prepare for a pandemic?
            Many countries ? Canada in particular ? have made considerable progress in planning to mitigate a pandemic, compared with just three years ago when only a few had national pandemic plans. But implementation remains patchy.

            What progress has been made in vaccines?
            Plenty. Vaccines with adjuvants that boost their effectiveness by making antigens go much further ? a crucial factor in a pandemic ? are belatedly getting the attention they deserve, despite the inertia of regulators, governments, and research agencies.

            Current formulations are so antigen-sparing that todays flu-vaccine production capacity would be enough to vaccinate everyone on Earth.

            But vaccines can't be made until a pandemic starts, and the particular pandemic strain has been identified. So it will be a race against the clock, requiring an unprecedented level of international coordination.

            As things stand, vaccines wouldn't be available until several months into a pandemic, and the nine countries that have the flu-vaccine factories are likely to keep the first batches for themselves.

            Taiwan, Korea, Brazil and Mexico are now developing their own flu-vaccine facilities.

            What are the alternatives to a perfectly matched vaccine?
            A Commentary in this week's issue of Nature highlights the possibility of using pre-pandemic vaccines matched to earlier variants of a pandemic strain.

            Even if these were only partly effective, they might confer sufficient protection to prevent death or severe disease.

            The World Health Organization is planning to stockpile more than 100 million doses of pre-pandemic vaccines, and some nations, including Japan, are considering the same.

            But the cruel reality is that without greater international effort, vaccines and antivirals are not going to be available to most of the world's population who live in poor countries.

            David Fedson, former director of medical affairs at the drug firm Sanofi-Aventis, argues that cheap, generic anti-inflammatory drugs that are widely available in poor countries could help to reduce death and severe disease during a pandemic.

            They could calm the massive overreaction of the immune system, called a cytokine storm, that is the main killer in flu.
            -

            ------

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

              Commentary

              H5N1 Pre-Pandemic Vaccinations
              Recombinomics Commentary 21:31
              July 9, 2008

              Unfortunately, the overall control picture is bleak.

              Thailand, Vietnam and China have notched up successes in curbing outbreaks in birds, which is key to minimizing the chance that the virus can pass to humans.

              But South Korea had its worst outbreak ever in April, and the disease has become endemic in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Egypt.

              The Commentary on page 162 endorses what might be an intriguing adjunct: 'pre-pandemic' vaccines, which would be matched not to the exact pandemic strain, but to earlier variants.

              Even if these vaccines were only partly effective, advocates argue, they might confer sufficient protection to prevent death or severe disease.

              Although this idea is untested, it merits consideration ? especially as strain-specific vaccines would be available only several months into the pandemic, and even then would be in very short supply.

              The above comments in today?s Nature highlight the downward spiral of efforts to contain H5N1. Since its explosion out of China in late 2003, H5N1 has expanded its geographical reach to over 60 countries, most of which were due to the spread of H5N1 into Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. As noted above, the countries initially hit by H5N1 in late 2003 and early 2004 have fought a losing battle and H5N1 has been declared endemic in multiple Asian countries, and within the past week has been declared endemic in Egypt also.

              A recent report on H5N1 from patients in Thailand has identified quasi-species with multiple receptor binding domain changes, including S227N, which has been reported in human cases in Turkey and Egypt in 2006 and 2007, as well as M230T. M230I has been linked to fatal cases in Egypt, while the vaccine resistant strain in Egypt and Israel has M230V. M230I is also in the clade 2.3.2 sequences in Japan, southeast Russia and presumably South Korea, where a soldier / culler has tested positive for H5. Human fatalities have been reported in Turkey, Iraq, Azerbaijan, and Egypt and receptor binding domain changes have been reported in all human outbreaks.

              Thus, it has become increasingly clear that the spread and diversity of H5N1 will pose a significant challenge, and the implementation of a pre-pandemic vaccine to prime the world?s population has significant merit.


              .
              "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                Current formulations are so antigen-sparing that todays flu-vaccine production capacity would be enough to vaccinate everyone on Earth.
                This is the first time I've seen this stated.
                The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                  Agreed, since a year or more ago, they said it took 10 times the normal vaccine to reach an acceptable level of immunity.

                  .
                  "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                    apparantly they don't want this being discussed, they refuse to comment
                    on this.

                    "current capacity" is not clearly defined, also what time-frame ?
                    How much could we produce in 6 months
                    a) with current conditions
                    b) with reduced security in a pandemic

                    I suppose that cell-based producing capacities could be quickly scaled
                    up almost linearly if there is demand. Just more bio-reactors.
                    Just like producing gloves or bombs - if there is demand,
                    and good payment, then capacities can quickly be generated.

                    But this is not what we usually read and no official comments on this (why ?)
                    vaccine producers refuse to comment
                    I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
                    my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                      This is from the March HHS update. I don't know the capacity for other countries or how far an adjuvant will stretch 600 million doses.
                      Does Declan Butler have better information than we do?

                      "Today, with HHS funding, six companies are in various stages of implementing commercial-scale production cell culture methods and/or expanding their capacity for conventional manufacturing using chicken eggs. The target date for achieving the 600 million dose target is 2011. The work is on schedule.

                      The driving motivation to build this target production capacity within the U.S. is to ensure that we can provide pandemic influenza vaccine for every American without having to purchase and import it from foreign-based manufacturing facilities. A condition of HHS? funding for the participating companies is that their manufacturing facilities be located within the United States."
                      The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                        >Whatever happened to bird flu?
                        >
                        >The media frenzy over bird
                        >flu has receded, but the threat of a global epidemic still looms
                        >large.

                        global epidemic = pandemic ? panzootic ?

                        "large" could be anything

                        >Declan Butler

                        so,Declan Butler is "editorial"

                        >Is bird flu affecting fewer people now?
                        >
                        >Yes and no. The 88 cases and 59 deaths reported last year
                        >are lower than the 2006 peak of 115 cases and 79 deaths, when
                        >the virus first arrived in Turkey and Egypt and sparked a large
                        >number of cases there. Thirty four cases have been reported so
                        >far this year.
                        >
                        >Vietnam, Thailand and China the only countries
                        >to report cases from 2003/04 during the current epidemic
                        >have made progress in controlling the spread of the virus in poultry.
                        > Once major hotspots, all three countries have consequently seen
                        >a significant drop in human cases.
                        >
                        >But cases have since cropped
                        >up in 12 other countries, with Indonesia leading at 135 cases
                        > more than one-third of the worldwide total of 385.

                        but where is the "no" ? Wider spread doesn't mean more people affected

                        >A major
                        >worry is that Bangladesh, which reported its first human case
                        >in May, might go the way of Indonesia because the virus is firmly
                        >established in the country's poultry.
                        >
                        >The apparent current
                        >downturn in cases could be short-lived.
                        >
                        >What is the situation
                        >in poultry?
                        >Although some countries are making progress controlling
                        >the disease, the prospects are bleak. Experts are now convinced
                        >that the disease has become endemic in Indonesia, Bangladesh,
                        >Vietnam and Egypt, making eradication impossible.

                        can't be "impossible". They could just get rid of poultry,
                        but that's a big economic loss

                        >That makes
                        >it inevitable that outbreaks will continue elsewhere as the poultry
                        >trade helps to spread the virus.
                        >
                        >In 2007, outbreaks in poultry
                        >or wildlife were reported in 28 countries. Twenty two countries

                        the number of countries is not so informative. Russia is big,
                        Europe has many small countries. A graph with the estimated amount
                        of prevalence and geographical spread over time would be useful.
                        E.g. estimates for #dead birds, average distance of
                        two dead H5N1-birds per year or month.

                        >have reported outbreaks this year, with South Korea having its
                        >worst outbreak ever in April. Sixty one countries have now been
                        >affected, and the H5N1 virus remains a major threat to agriculture
                        >and food supply, and to human health.
                        >
                        >Short-term fire-fighting
                        >tactics are now evolving into long-term efforts, including restructuring
                        >trade and farming practices.
                        >
                        >"Acceptance that the viruses
                        >will not be eradicated does not mean complacency it is a dose
                        >of reality. But it also takes the disease out of the headlines,
                        >" says Les Sims, a consultant for the United Nations Food and
                        >Agriculture Organization.
                        >
                        >"If governments are to tackle these
                        >issues, long-term donor support is needed. Unfortunately, long-
                        >term programmes may prove less appealing to donors than emergency
                        >activities, especially if the disease is no longer front-page
                        >news."
                        >
                        >One problem is that most countries don't have systems
                        >for rapidly incorporating new antigens into vaccines, making current
                        >poultry vaccines in high-risk areas increasingly ineffective.
                        >
                        >
                        >Might bird flu still reach the Americas?
                        >Yes. That it hasn'
                        >t already is mostly down to good luck, and relative geographic
                        >isolation. If it enters the Americas it could be a disaster for
                        >the food industry in Latin America Brazil is the largest producer
                        >of poultry.

                        American climate or flora+fauna could be unfavorable for H5N1.
                        I remember one study which showed that the American and
                        Eurasian strains rarely mix.

                        >If the risks are still there, why has the media
                        >largely gone quiet?

                        because the risk is estimated as smaller

                        >Media coverage of avian flu peaked from
                        >mid-2005 to mid-2006. That was when H5N1 avian flu erupted out
                        >of Asia, spread across Russia, and fanned out into Europe and
                        >Africa.

                        and money for countermeasures had to be approved (1.9B for WHO,
                        7B for USA), so the threat was maybe pictured bigger than
                        people who wanted the money to be approved really thought.

                        >Although bird flu has since faded from the front pages,
                        > media coverage in fact remains sustained and high, as can be
                        >seen from a timeline search of the Google News archive.

                        ? is there an URL ?
                        just some days ago someone posted a timeline for google-hits
                        and we have the forum-activity. The stories may still be there,
                        on the internet,
                        but most newspapers don't bring it.


                        >What'
                        >s being done to prepare for a pandemic?
                        >Many countries Canada
                        >in particular have made considerable progress in planning
                        >to mitigate a pandemic, compared with just three years ago when
                        >only a few had national pandemic plans. But implementation remains
                        >patchy.
                        >
                        >What progress has been made in vaccines?
                        >Plenty.
                        >Vaccines with adjuvants that boost their effectiveness by making
                        >antigens go much further a crucial factor in a pandemic
                        >are belatedly getting the attention they deserve, despite the
                        >inertia of regulators, governments, and research agencies.
                        >
                        >
                        >Current formulations are so antigen-sparing that todays flu-vaccine
                        >production capacity would be enough to vaccinate everyone on Earth.
                        >
                        >
                        >But vaccines can't be made until a pandemic starts, and the

                        they are already being made

                        >particular pandemic strain has been identified. So it will be
                        >a race against the clock, requiring an unprecedented level of
                        >international coordination.
                        >
                        >As things stand, vaccines wouldn'
                        >t be available until several months into a pandemic, and the nine
                        >countries that have the flu-vaccine factories are likely to keep
                        >the first batches for themselves.

                        the batches may come in big breadth, more than they could use
                        themselves

                        >Taiwan, Korea, Brazil and
                        >Mexico are now developing their own flu-vaccine facilities.
                        >
                        >
                        >What are the alternatives to a perfectly matched vaccine?
                        >A
                        >Commentary in this week's issue of Nature highlights the possibility
                        >of using pre-pandemic vaccines matched to earlier variants of
                        >a pandemic strain.

                        OK, he distinguishes "vaccine" and "prepandemic vaccine", the latter
                        being no (real) vaccine

                        >Even if these were only partly effective,
                        > they might confer sufficient protection to prevent death or severe
                        >disease.
                        >
                        >The World Health Organization is planning to stockpile
                        >more than 100 million doses of pre-pandemic vaccines, and some
                        >nations, including Japan, are considering the same.
                        >
                        >But the
                        >cruel reality is that without greater international effort, vaccines
                        >and antivirals are not going to be available to most of the world'
                        >s population who live in poor countries.
                        >
                        >David Fedson, former
                        >director of medical affairs at the drug firm Sanofi-Aventis, argues
                        >that cheap, generic anti-inflammatory drugs that are widely available
                        >in poor countries could help to reduce death and severe disease
                        >during a pandemic.

                        who supports it ? WHO ?

                        >They could calm the massive overreaction
                        >of the immune system, called a cytokine storm, that is the main
                        >killer in flu.
                        >-
                        I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
                        my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                          Originally posted by mixin View Post
                          This is from the March HHS update. I don't know the capacity for other countries or how far an adjuvant will stretch 600 million doses.
                          Does Declan Butler have better information than we do?

                          "Today, with HHS funding, six companies are in various stages of implementing commercial-scale production cell culture methods and/or expanding their capacity for conventional manufacturing using chicken eggs. The target date for achieving the 600 million dose target is 2011. The work is on schedule.

                          The driving motivation to build this target production capacity within the U.S. is to ensure that we can provide pandemic influenza vaccine for every American without having to purchase and import it from foreign-based manufacturing facilities. A condition of HHS’ funding for the participating companies is that their manufacturing facilities be located within the United States."

                          they probably mean: six _US_ companies

                          that was maybe the wrong decision ? In 2005 they maybe didn't
                          anticipate the advances made in 2006/7.
                          Other countries rely on APAs. Maybe it was also national pride
                          or overestimating the risk of export-restrictions


                          -----edit1------
                          as I understand, of these 600M doses 300M could be prepandemic
                          and only the 2nd shot is strain-specific.

                          (plus the shots for the mutations,next waves ...)
                          I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
                          my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                            they probably mean: six _US_ companies

                            # In this update, they didn't name the companies. I suspect any of the foreign companies could have been contracted as long as the facility was built here.

                            that was maybe the wrong decision ? In 2005 they maybe didn't
                            anticipate the advances made in 2006/7.
                            Other countries rely on APAs. Maybe it was also national pride
                            or overestimating the risk of export-restrictions

                            # Probably not the wrong decision, imo. I think it's important for us to be able to manufacture our own products instead of relying on other countries. If the need to produce vax no longer exists, the facilities could probably be used for other products.

                            What's an APA?
                            The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: _|NATURE, EDITORIAL: The long war against flu|_

                              yes, US-factories, not companies.

                              it depends on the price, of course.
                              E.g. you won't build these computer-chips in USA,
                              when it's much cheaper in Asia.
                              Principally it's an advantage to be independent, but there
                              is a threashold, where it just doesn't calculate.

                              We had no pandemic yet and maybe 2011 is early enough.
                              But could we blame Switzerland or Austria , that they had
                              vaccine and APA(advance purchase agreement of
                              pandemic vaccine with a vaccine producer) which now expire ?
                              We couldn't know in advance.
                              USA had had little vaccine for a pandemic in 2007.

                              Now that we have cell-base technology it's presumably not so
                              important where the vaccine is being produced that you ordered.
                              I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
                              my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X