Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week

The Canadian Press , 09 Oct, 2014 02:19 PM
    TORONTO - Experimental Ebola vaccine that Canada has donated to the World Health Organization will be shipped to Geneva next week, the global health agency said Thursday.
     
    The WHO is finalizing the legal agreement needed for it to take possession of between 800 and 1,000 vials of donated vaccine. Once that contract is signed the vaccine will then be shipped, a senior official told The Canadian Press.
     
    "We are negotiating the final agreement and we should have it signed, I hope, by the beginning of next week. And we should be able to move the vaccine next week," said Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny, the WHO's assistant director general for health systems and innovation.
     
    "This is why the vaccine is not yet in Geneva, and not then distributed further."
     
    Soon-to-start clinical trials will establish if the vaccine is safe to use in people and how much — or little — is needed to protect a person. It is hoped the results will show that a low dose can be used, which would mean each vial might contain up to 100 doses of vaccine.
     
    If Canada transfers 1,000 vials to the WHO and if 100 doses can be obtained from each vial, the Canadian donation could turn out to be 100,000 doses of vaccine. The studies may show each person will need two doses of vaccine to gain protection, a priming and a boosting dose.
     
    Kieny said the vaccine was left in Winnipeg while plans were being worked out on who would conduct clinical trials of the experimental vaccine and where those trials would take place.
     
    Until those plans were nearing completion, there was no need to have the vaccine in Geneva, Kieny said. The Winnipeg lab had the capacity to safely store the vials and the Geneva hospital that will hold the vaccine for the WHO had to purchase a special freezer to store it at -80 C.
     
    The vaccine, called VSV-EBOV, was created by scientists at the National Microbiology Laboratory.
     
    Canada holds the intellectual property rights to the vaccine but has licensed the rights to a small American biotech company, NewLink Genetics. Based in Ames, Iowa, the company's primary focus — until recently — has been the development of cancer vaccines. It does not have its own vaccine production facility and has never brought a product through the expensive and onerous process of gaining regulatory approval.
     
    But because it holds the licence to one of a very few experimental Ebola vaccines — and one of only two ready for human safety trials — NewLink has found itself at the centre of a storm.
     
    While the company has been getting assistance from a U.S. government agency — the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, or BARDA — frustrated scientists and others have questioned whether the company has the resources, finances and clout to push the vaccine forward.
     
    In an interview earlier this week, NewLink's vice-president of business development, Brian Wiley, said the company has been working as fast as it can.
     
    "Our primary goal is to do this in the most accelerated, most ethical way possible to ensure the likelihood of success," Wiley said.
     
    Meanwhile clinical trials of the other vaccine being tested in people have already started. That vaccine, called cAd3, was designed by scientists at the U.S. National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
     
    In fact, investigators studying cAd3 started injecting the vaccine into volunteers — health-care workers and other health sector front-line workers — in Mali on Thursday. This is the first time a clinical trial of an Ebola drug or vaccine has been conducted in Africa.
     
    The trial in Mali is a joint venture of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, the Center for Vaccine Development of Mali and the Ministry of Health of Mali.
     
    Mali borders on Guinea — where the outbreak began late last year — making it a country at high risk of having cases. But to date it has not reported any.
     
    NewLink's Wiley said five clinical trials of the VSV-EBOV vaccine will soon be under way in the United States (two), Germany, Switzerland and in an unnamed African country which is not battling Ebola.
     
    As well, Canada wants to conduct a clinical trial in this country.
     
    Kieny says researchers who will conduct the European and African clinical trials should be submitting their proposals to their regulatory agencies next week, which means they will soon need supplies of vaccine.
     
    "This is why we are finalizing this agreement in order to be able to move it, so that we can provide it on time," Kieny said. 
     
    This Ebola outbreak is the largest in history. The WHO is currently pegging the case count at 8,033 infections and 3,865 deaths. But it noted in a grimly worded report Wednesday that the ability to record accurate counts is declining, especially in Liberia.
     
    Because the number of cases has far outstripped the capacity to care for the ill, infected people are being cared for — and in many cases, dying — in the community, not coming to the attention of authorities.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Watch your diet to reduce diabetes risk

    Watch your diet to reduce diabetes risk
    Losing weight may be good but not enough to prevent Type 2 diabetes as researchers have shown that you do not have to be overweight to have elevated levels of...

    Watch your diet to reduce diabetes risk

    Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi

    Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi
    Assuring the same quick reaction and proactive response a Japanese investor accorded when he was chief minister of Gujarat, Prime Minister Narendra...

    Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi

    Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension

    Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension
    The condition known as Resistant Hyper-tension increases stroke risk by 35 percent in women and 20 percent in elderly patients, according to new research....

    Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension

    Caffeinated 'energy' drinks bad for heart

    "Energy" drinks which are so popular during physical exercise and even otherwise among children and younger adults can cause heart problems, a research shows....

    Caffeinated 'energy' drinks bad for heart

    Wine good for your heart only if you exercise

    Wine good for your heart only if you exercise
    If you think moderate wine drinking can protect against cardio-vascular diseases (CVDs), you are probably right: Just mix daily exercise to it....

    Wine good for your heart only if you exercise

    World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works

    World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works
    In a revolutionary breakthrough for heart patients, scientists have come up with a way to power a cardiac pacemaker with an alternative energy source - the heart motion....

    World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works