The Manila Times

Ebola vaccines show promise

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WASHINGTON, D. C.: Two experiment­al Ebola vaccines can safely elicit immune responses by one month after initial vaccinatio­n that last for at least one year, results from a large clinical trial in Liberia showed on Wednesday last week. The trial, published in the

and conducted by a US- Liberia clinical research collaborat­ion, involved 1,500 healthy adults who were rapidly enrolled at Redemption Hospital in Monrovia, capital of Liberia, in early 2015 during the West Africa Ebola outbreak.

Three groups of 500 volunteers received one of the experiment­al vaccines or a placebo, and they all provided blood samples before vaccinatio­n and again at one week, one month, six months and one year post- vaccinatio­n.

The vaccines included cAd3EBOZ, co- developed by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases ( NIAID) and GlaxoSmith­Kline; and rVSV- ZEBOV, which was initially engineered by scientists from the Public Health Agency of Canada and is now licensed to Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck.

Blood sample testing showed that responses at one week were modest with both vaccines but 71 percent of cAd3- EBOZ recipients and 84 percent of rVSV- ZEBOV recipients developed an antibody response by one month.

At one year, 64 percent of cAd3EBOZ recipients and 80 percent of rVSV- ZEBOV recipients still had an antibody response, indicating that antibody responses were largely maintained in both groups.

Some participan­ts who received the experiment­al vaccines experience­d mild to moderate side effects, such as headache, muscle pain, feverishne­ss and fatigue.

Overall, the experiment did not identify any major safety concerns related to the vaccines. Most of the serious medical issues reported during the trial were due to malaria.

“This clinical trial has yielded valuable informatio­n that is essential for the continued developmen­t of these two Ebola vaccine candidates and also demonstrat­es that well- designed, ethically sound clinical research can be conducted during an epidemic,” Anthony Fauci, director of the NIAID, which sponsored the trial, said in a statement.

“A safe and effective vaccine would be a critically important addition to classical public health measures in controllin­g inevitable future Ebola outbreaks,” he added.

The Ebola virus disease is a severe, often fatal illness in humans. The virus is transmitte­d to people from wild animals and spreads in the human population through human- to- human transmissi­on. Currently, no Ebola vaccine has been licensed for use in humans. XINHUA

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