Final test results
confirm an experimental Ebola vaccine is highly effective, a major milestone
that could help prevent the spread of outbreaks like the one that killed
thousands in West Africa.
Associated
Press report continues:
Scientists
have struggled to develop an Ebola vaccine over the years, and this is the
first one proven to work. Efforts were ramped up after the infectious disease
caused a major outbreak, beginning in 2013 in Guinea and spreading to Liberia
and Sierra Leone. About 11,300 people died.
The
World Health Organization, which acknowledged shortcomings in its response to
the West Africa outbreak, led the study of the vaccine, which was developed by
the Canadian government and is now licensed to the U.S.-based Merck & Co.
Results were published Thursday.
Merck
is expected to seek regulatory approval in the U.S. and Europe sometime next
year.
The
experimental vaccine was given to about 5,800 people last year in Guinea, as
the virus was waning. All had some contact with a new Ebola patient. They got
the vaccine right away or three weeks later. After a 10-day waiting period, no
Ebola cases developed in those immediately vaccinated, 23 cases turned up among
those with delayed vaccination.
The
Lancet paper published Thursday mostly crystallizes what was already largely
known from interim results released last year. The vaccine proved so effective
that the study was stopped midway so that everyone exposed to Ebola in Guinea
could be immunized.
"I
really believe that now we have a tool which would allow (us) to control a new
outbreak of Ebola of the Zaire strain," said Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny, a WHO
assistant director-general who was the study's lead author. "It's the first
vaccine for which efficacy has been shown."
She
noted that other Ebola vaccines are undergoing testing, and that a vaccine is
also needed to protect against a second strain, Sudan.
The virus first turned up in Africa in 1976 and had caused periodic outbreaks mostly in central Africa, but never with results as deadly as the West Africa outbreak. Many previous vaccine attempts have failed. Among the hurdles: the sporadic nature of outbreaks and funding shortages.
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