The World Health
Organization (WHO) has declared the Ebola emergency over, but action is still
needed to fully develop effective vaccines and prepare the world for future
outbreaks, experts said on Thursday.
Reuters
report continues:
Great progress has been made in Ebola vaccine development in the last
two years, according to a report by an international panel of infectious
disease experts, but this "could grind to a halt as memories of the
outbreak in West Africa begin to fade".
"The
job is still not done," said Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust
global health charity which co-led a report on the world's progress towards
Ebola immunization.
"As
Ebola infection rates come under control it's a huge concern that complacency
sets in, attention moves to more immediate threats and Ebola vaccine
development is left half-finished."
The
WHO said on Tuesday that West Africa's Ebola outbreak, which began in Guinea in
late 2013 and killed more than 11,300 people in almost 20 months, no longer
constitutes a threat to international public health.
During
the epidemic, a total of 13 Ebola vaccine candidates - including different
combinations of shots - were tested in early- and mid-stage clinical trials.
Several
drugmakers, including Johnson & Johnson, Merck and GlaxoSmithKline moved
potential Ebola vaccines well into the clinical trial process, and three
late-stage, or so-called Phase III, trials were initiated in Africa - one each
in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Trials
of one vaccine, Merck's rVSV-ZEBOV, progressed far enough to show in trials
that it is safe and effective, prompting GAVI, the global vaccine alliance, to
buy 300,000 doses as a stockpile for use during future Ebola outbreaks.
Unanswered Questions
Yet
so far, no Ebola vaccine has been submitted for regulatory review and the
expert panel said there are still too many unanswered questions about Ebola
vaccines.
Michael
Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy
(CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota in the United States and a co-author of
the report, cautioned the global health officials against believing the
progress made had "solved the problem of Ebola".
"The
path forward is not quite so simple, and many unresolved challenges and
questions remain," he said.
These
include gaining continuing trials to get more data on the safety and efficacy
of various Ebola vaccines and engaging African public health leaders to clarify
how vaccines can be used or evaluated in new outbreaks.
"After the hard
lessons we've learned, it would be a tragedy not to put a final stop to the
current Ebola epidemic and be prepared for the next outbreak," said
Farrar.
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