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The Vaccine Alliance,
Gavi, has signed a US$5m (£3.5m) deal for an Ebola vaccine, to protect against
future outbreaks of the deadly disease. The deal commits pharmaceutical company Merck to
keeping 300,000 vaccines ready for emergency use or further clinical trials.
BBC
News report continues:
It
will also submit an application to license the vaccine by the end of 2017,
which would the next step towards enabling Gavi to prepare a global stockpile.
More
than 11,000 people have died in the latest outbreak in West Africa.
The
sheer scale of the outbreak - the largest in history - led to an unprecedented
push on vaccines, which condensed a decade's work into less than a year.
Merck
has led trials of the VSV-EBOV vaccine - which combines a fragment of the Ebola
virus with another safer virus in order to train the immune system to beat
Ebola.
Early
evidence from studies in West Africa suggest it may give 100% protection,
although more data is still being collected.
'Wake-up call'
Dr
Seth Berkley, the chief executive of Gavi, said: "The suffering caused by
the Ebola crisis was a wake-up call to many in the global health community.
"New
threats require smart solutions, and our innovative financing agreement with
Merck will ensure that we are ahead of the curve for future Ebola
outbreaks."
Gavi,
an alliance of public bodies and companies committed to saving lives through
vaccination, announced the advanced-purchase commitment at the World Economic
Forum held at Davos in the Swiss Alps.
The
US$5m paid to Merck will be offset against any vaccines Gavi orders once the
shot is licensed.
The
World Health Organization declared West Africa Ebola-free last week, after all
of the affected countries had gone 42 days without a case.
But
then, just hours later, a death in Sierra Leone was confirmed to be from Ebola.
The
WHO has warned more flare-ups are expected.
Dr
Jeremy Farrar, the director of the Wellcome Trust medical research charity,
said VSV-EBOV had shown "remarkable results" and was one of the
"few positive outcomes" to emerge from the epidemic.
He
said: "As we saw with the new confirmed case just last week, the Ebola
epidemic is likely to have a long tail and it's possible that several more
isolated cases will emerge in the coming weeks and months.
"This
vaccine, therefore, could still play an important role in containing any
additional flare-ups of this outbreak, as well as being available to help
prevent future epidemics."
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