The Manila Times

$460-m vaccine push to ‘outsmart’ viruses

- AFP

DAVOS, Switzerlan­d: With the world still reeling from outbreaks of deadly Ebola and baby-deforming Zika, government­s and charities launched a $ 460- million ( 431 million- euro) initiative Thursday to “outsmart” infectious epidemics.

The goal is to develop vaccines which should be available free of charge to contain outbreaks before they become global health emergencie­s, the creators of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s ( CEPI) announced at the World Economic Forum here.

“We know that epidemics are face to life, health and prosperity,” said Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust, a health research charity backing the project.

“Vaccines can protect us, but we’ve done too little to develop them... CEPI is our chance to learn the lessons of recent tragedies and outsmart epidemics with new vaccine defenses.”

The priority will be vaccines against the highly- contagious and fatal Middle Eastern Respirator­y Syndrome ( MERS) as well as the Lassa and Nipah viruses, which can cause serious epidemics.

The coalition will aim to create two trial vaccines for each of these viruses “so that these are available without delay if and when an outbreak begins.”

“Ebola and Zika showed that the world is tragically unprepared to detect local outbreaks and respond quickly enough to prevent them from becoming global pandemics,” said billionair­e CEPI backer Bill Gates.

About 11,300 people died in a 2013- 16 Ebola epidemic in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone—the worst outbreak by far in the disease’s 40-year history.

Finish the job on Ebola

Since 2015, more than 2,200 babies in Brazil have been born with microcepha­ly, a crippling deformatio­n of the head and brain, in an unpreceden­ted outbreak of the mosquito-borne Zika virus.

The race is on to develop vaccines against both diseases, but none has been registered yet.

So far, CEPI has received money from Germany, Japan and Norway, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Wellcome Trust— raising almost half the years of operation.

The economic damage caused by epidemics is matched only by wars and environmen­tal disaster, Norway’s Prime Minister Erna Solberg said in Davos.

“Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia suffered an economic loss of at least $3 billion as a result of Ebola, and we know that SARS cost $40 billion.”

Andrew Witty, chief executive of CEPI participan­t GlaxoSmith­Kline, said the initiative would seek to develop vaccines through Phase I safety and Phase II ef

This way, when an outbreak happens, the drug can be quickly put through Phase III testing in a stage before licensing.

- cines,” said Gates, though “at our current funding level it is more likely that we will be able to do two or three.”

For Farrar, this should include which several vaccine candidates have proven effective in trials.

“We have to be able to have a licensed vaccine that can be used tomorrow when the inevitable epidemic of Ebola comes back,” he said.

The greatest mistake, added Farrar, would be “to do what we did after SARS, and that is to forget it and move on.”

A 2003 outbreak of the deadly respirator­y disease infected people in nearly 40 countries within weeks and caused global panic. It claimed 800 lives, mainly in Asia.

The coalition said it would need “significan­t additional investment,” urging more government­s and charities to join the initiative.

Other participan­ts include the World Health Organizati­on, several NGOs and pharmaceut­ical companies.

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