Guest guest Posted December 22, 2006 Report Share Posted December 22, 2006 U.Md. to test vaccine for bird flu Karl B. Hille, The Examiner Dec 20, 2006 3:00 AM BALTIMORE - The University of land School of Medicine will begin testing its cell-based bird flu vaccine in January in preparation for a possible flu pandemic in the near future. Researchers expect the cell-based vaccine that uses whole virus particles to provide immunity faster and more reliably than those incubated in chicken eggs then broken into fragments, according to a release from the university. This will be the first whole-virus vaccine for bird flu tested in the United States. " Your body responds better by seeing things in their natural form, " said Dr. , an assistant professor of pediatrics and principal investigator on the study. " Any additional immune response you can get for a pandemic flu would be good. You've got higher stakes. " Seasonal flu vaccines are prepared using viral particles broken into fragments using a detergent, he said, because they have been shown to produce lower side effects. Nationally, health researchers and agencies are gearing up for a potential flu pandemic, like the one that killed thousands in 1918. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded $11.4 million to companies working on tests that can identify avian flu within minutes in a doctor's office. MesoScale, in Gaithersburg, received more than $700,000 of that money. A prime suspect for a pandemic, bird flu has infected more than 250 people in 10 countries since 2003, resulting in more than 150 deaths, according to the CDC. So far, highly contagious and person-to-person transmission needed for a pandemic is missing. Although health officials say they can't be certain the H5N1 bird flu virus will be the next pandemic, developing faster tests and faster means of mass-producing vaccines may be the best way to respond to a deadly outbreak. " The information that we gain from these trials will be invaluable for the pandemic flu, " said. Volunteers needed The Center for Vaccine Development at the University of land School of Medicine is seeking 50 to 100 healthy volunteers age 18 to 40 years old to test a bird flu vaccine. The eight-month trial is funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. Volunteers face a medical screening, several blood samples and two shots, and will be randomly assigned to groups receiving the cell culture-based H5N1 vaccine, or a placebo. Compensation will be provided. For more information or to register, call 410-706-6156. http://www.examiner.com/a-466515~U_Md__to_test_vaccine_for_bird_flu.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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