Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. Ebola vaccine looks protective but may require high dose: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2014 11:46 AM

    TORONTO — A single dose of a U.S.-designed Ebola vaccine may be protective against the disease, a new study suggests. But the research also appears to indicate that dose will have to be relatively large, which may present problems for the vaccine.

    The study found that people who got the higher of two doses tested in the trial developed immune responses that look similar to those seen in vaccinated non-human primates who survive exposure to what should have been lethal doses of Ebola. Many of them also developed mild to moderate side-effects.

    The vaccine was created by scientists at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and is being developed by Pharma giant GSK, formerly known as GlaxoSmithKline. The study was published online Wednesday by the New England Journal of Medicine.

    Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the institute, agreed in an interview that the effective dose is "a pretty large" one. But he insisted if that is what it takes for this vaccine to work, that dose size would not be a show stopper.

    "We don't have any problem with the possibility that we might have to use (it)," he said of the higher dose.

    It would mean that it will take more of the vaccine to do clinical trials to determine if the vaccine is truly effective, and to vaccinate in West Africa if a decision to do that is made. But that could be done, Fauci said. "They'll have to make a bit more, but that's the way it goes."

    He noted another trial of the vaccine, which is still ongoing, is studying a dose that is midway between the two doses this first trial tested. It could be that that dose might work, he said.

    GSK also hailed the results.

    "We are very encouraged by these positive first trial results showing this type of vaccine has an acceptable safety profile and can produce an immune response against Ebola in humans," Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the company's chairman of global vaccines, said in a statement.

    Others, though, wondered about the practicality of the size of the effective dose, and about the side-effects seen in people who received the vaccine.

    Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Diseases Research and Policy, said the amount of vaccine needed to reach the presumed protective response calls into question whether GSK can make enough of the vaccine soon enough to help bring this outbreak under control.

    "It's a front and centre question," Osterholm said.

    The vaccine, called chAd3, is designed to protect against two different Ebola viruses — Ebola Zaire, which is causing the current West African outbreak, and Ebola Sudan. There are five known types of Ebola, but virtually all human disease is caused by Zaire, Sudan and Bundibugyo viruses.

    The vaccine cannot infect the recipient with either disease, but it does induce the immune system to respond in ways that should protect if the recipient is later exposed to either strain of Ebola.

    The vaccine is one of two which will soon be tested in West Africa in the hopes that they can help to contain the epidemic that has been ravaged Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. New case figures released Wednesday by the World Health Organization set the known cases at just shy of 16,000 and the death toll at 5,689.

    The other vaccine, known as rVSV-EBOV, was designed by scientists at the Public Health Agency of Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. The rights to the vaccine were purchased earlier this week by Merck, a major international player in the vaccine market.

    There have been concerns that the GSK vaccine would be poorly immunogenic — that it might take two doses to induce a protective response. In the midst of an outbreak — especially one raging in countries with shattered health-care systems — a two-dose regimen is considered far from ideal and perhaps even unworkably complicated.

    The Merck vaccine, for which the first trial results are still pending, is expected to generate a stronger immune response at a smaller dose, based on studies in non-human primates. But there have been concerns about it, related to what is known as reactogenicity — the side-effects seen when the vaccine is given.

    The vaccine is expected to induce things like headache, malaise, chills and fevers. That constellation of side-effects might seem like a small price to pay for protection against Ebola. But they mirror the early symptoms of Ebola, which could complicate the situation on the ground in affected countries.

    One of the surprises of the study of the GSK vaccine is that at the high dose, there were quite a few side-effects reported as well.

    "This is sort of what I would have expected to see with the VSV" vaccine, said Dr. Daniel Bausch, an Ebola expert at Tulane School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in New Orleans.

    Osterholm agreed: "From the initial data which is very limited here it raises questions if there would really be any difference between the two."

    Bausch wrote an editorial for the journal which was published with the study. It suggests the world is "one step closer to an Ebola virus vaccine."

    He called the results promising, but noted that scientists do not really know what a protected human immune system looks like; they are extrapolating from what is seen in vaccinated primates.

    Bausch also cautioned that results in healthy adults in the United States may not truly reflect how well the vaccine works in people in West Africa. For instance, he noted that studies have shown that some vaccines do not work as well in populations where malaria is omnipresent.

    On the plus side, he noted a different formulation of the GSK vaccine currently being tested in Britain — one that protects against only one strain of Ebola, Ebola Zaire — may be more protective than the two-strain version.

    Both the GSK and the Merck vaccines are expected to go into trials in West Africa early in the new year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year
    OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget office says the Harper government's $550 million small business job credit will only create 200 net new jobs next year and another 600 in 2016.

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader
    QUEBEC - Pierre Karl Peladeau is rejecting calls that he sell his controlling stake in Quebecor Inc. as he ponders a bid for the leadership of the Parti Quebecois.

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The case of a Newfoundland man released from prison after murder charges were dropped will return to court next month to set trial dates on separate charges.

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act
    OTTAWA - The Council of Canadians and the Canadian Federation of Students will ask the courts to overturn parts of the Harper government's Fair Elections Act.

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns
    OTTAWA - The Harper government's $550-million small-business job credit will create just 800 net new jobs in 2015-16, while a freeze in employment insurance premiums could cost the economy 10,000 jobs over the same period, Canada's parliamentary budget office says.

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights
    OTTAWA - The RCMP has about 63 active security investigations on 90 suspected extremists who intend to join fights abroad or who have returned to Canada, said Bob Paulson, commissioner of the national police force.

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights