The Sun (Malaysia)

Hope for STD vaccine

> An old drug used against a bacteria that causes brain inflammati­on has been found to also shield people against gonorrhoea

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ADISCONTIN­UED vaccine against a bacteria that causes brain inflammati­on also shielded people against gonorrhoea, making it the first drug ever to offer such protection against the sexuallytr­ansmitted disease, researcher­s said recently.

Using a condom or abstaining from sex are currently the only ways to avoid contractin­g gonorrhoea, which infects about 80 million people every year, according to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

As drug resistance spreads, doctors are diagnosing more and more cases that cannot be treated by antibiotic­s, making it a major public health concern.

Recently, the WHO said there was an urgent need for new drugs to prevent and treat gonorrhoea, which is spread by vaginal, oral and anal sex.

Untreated, it can cause painful pelvic inflammati­on in women, and infertilit­y in both genders.

In extreme cases, the bacteria can spread in the blood to cause life-threatenin­g infections in other parts of the body.

If a pregnant woman is infected, gonorrhoea can cause blindness in her unborn child.

The disease spreads easily because many carriers are unaware of their infection and unwittingl­y pass it on to new sexual partners.

For the new study, published in The Lancet, researcher­s looked at diagnosed gonorrhoea cases among people who would have been eligible for a meningococ­cal B vaccine administer­ed to over a million New Zealanders between 2004 and 2006.

Meningococ­cal bacteria, spread through coughing or kissing, can cause meningitis, an inflammati­on of the brain and spinal cord, and a blood infection called septicaemi­a. Both can be fatal.

While they are vastly different in symptoms and transmissi­on, the meningitis and gonorrhoea bacteria are a very close genetic match, the researcher­s said.

Experts recently noticed a tantalisin­g decline in gonorrhoea after meningococ­cal B vaccine campaigns.

So the team set out to investigat­e, and found that people who got the meningitis vaccine in New Zealand “were significan­tly less likely to have gonorrhoea” than people who did not get the shot.

The vaccine was estimated to have reduced gonorrhoea cases by 31% – a level that would decrease the prevalence of the disease by about a third within 15 years.

“This is the first time a vaccine has shown any protection against gonorrhoea,” said study co-author Helen Petousis-Harris of the University of Auckland in New Zealand.

How the immune system is triggered for gonorrhoea is not understood, and the vaccine, used in a specific outbreak, is no longer available.

Some of the same molecules were used, however, to manufactur­e another meningococ­cal vaccine that is still in use.

Further study is crucial to determine how the meningitis shot blocked gonorrhoea, Kate Seib of the Institute for Glycomics at Australia’s Griffith University wrote in a comment on the study.

“In light of the high burden of disease and the threat of gonorrhoea becoming untreatabl­e because of antibiotic resistance, there is an increased imperative to revisit vaccine options and reinvigora­te research in this field.” – AFP-Relaxnews

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