Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 out of context i am guessing this was printed in 1998. it says vaccines studies had been conducted for 60 yrs prior to this piece. i'd like to know how they can conclude it successfully prevents contraction, i guess that is ultimately my question for all these vaccines. do they have people locked away who have never been exposed to the enviroment or vaccines and then they expose them and compare that with these idiots in these trials? Nevermind, i guess it's just been a bad day! http://www.utmb.edu/newsroom/02pr/nov02/herp_vacc.htm  University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Public Affairs Office 301 University Boulevard, Suite 3.102 Galveston, Texas 77555-0144 (409) 772-2618 (800) 228-1841 www.utmb.edu NEW VACCINE REDUCES INCIDENCE OF GENITAL HERPES DISEASE BY MORE THAN 70 PERCENT IN UNINFECTED WOMEN, STUDY FINDS GALVESTON, Texas—Although it didn’t safeguard men, a new vaccine reduced by more than 70 percent the incidence of genital herpes disease in women who were previously uninfected with the oral and genital herpes viruses. That is the conclusion of a report on two phase-three clinical trials testing the vaccine in 2,714 people, 978 of them women, at centers across the globe and published in the Thursday, Nov. 21, edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. “People have been trying to make a herpes vaccine without success for more than 60 years,†said infectious disease specialist and vaccinologist Lawrence R. Stanberry, chairman of the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) and lead author of the paper. He added, “ This is the first one to prove effective.†According to 1997 figures, the most recent statistics available from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 45 million Americans have contracted genital herpes. This means about one in five of all people over age 12 outside jails, prisons, nursing homes and hospitals have the virus technically known as herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2). That virus is so named to distinguish it from herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), a closely related virus that causes similar small, sometimes painful “fever blisters†around the lips and nostrils in about 80 percent of Americans. “These are very exciting findings,†Stanberry said. “These new studies suggest that a comprehensive campaign to vaccinate girls and women not infected with either type of herpes simplex virus could significantly reduce the spread of the herpes epidemic in the general population.†As a result of these studies, the National Institutes of Health and the drug company GlaxoKline are collaborating on new studies scheduled to begin this month that will test the vaccine on 7,550 women between 18 and 30 years old “who don’t have HSV-2 and don’t want to get it,†said a co-author of the paper, K. Tyring, UTMB professor of dermatology and microbiology and immunology and director of the UTMB Center for Clinical Studies. Tyring’s center enrolled more than 500 people in the two vaccine studies, the largest number tested at any single center in the studies reported in the new paper. The initial study analyzed the effects of the three-dose vaccine in a total of 268 women and 579 men free from infection with both HSV-1 and HSV-2. The type 2 virus may cause painful lesions in the genital region that can increase susceptibility to other sexually transmitted diseases, including the AIDS virus. In the United States alone, about 2,500 newborn babies are infected with the virus, which is potentially fatal; they usually acquire it from their HSV-2-infected mothers in the birth canal. In the second study reported in the same paper, researchers focused on 710 women and 1,157 men who had not been infected with HSV-2. In both groups, the study subjects’ regular sexual partners had a history of genital herpes. As in the first study, the recipients were injected with the vaccine followed by a second dose a month later and a third dose after six months. In the first group of women tested, the vaccine proved 73 percent effective in protecting against genital herpes disease for 19 months, the duration of the study. In the second group, which was designed to focus on those not previously infected with HSV-2 alone, analysis showed that the vaccine was 74 percent effective in preventing genital herpes in women who had not been infected with either HSV-1 or HSV-2. Vaccines generally protect against disease, not infection, Stanberry noted, and it is unclear whether latent infection in those vaccinated might lead to transmission. In addition to not working in men, the vaccine was not effective in women who had been exposed to HSV-1. Stanberry said the current studies suggested that, in women specifically, prior infection with oral herpes seems to confer some protection against acquiring genital herpes. But he said that conclusion is likely to be controversial because previous studies have reported contrary findings. The paper’s authors said it wasn’t clear why the vaccine was effective in women and not in men but said it might have something to do with how the virus enters the body, which is thought to be different in men and women. In men, breaks or tears in skin of male sex organs are thought to be the main way HSV gains entry. Intact skin is “a highly effective barrier against penetration by HSV,†the authors write. Given the same number of sexual partners, women are twice as likely to contract herpes as men, Stanberry noted. Possibly this is so because in women, “ acquisition of HSV is likely to occur though the vaginal-cervical mucous membrane,†which lacks a typical skin barrier, the studies’ authors note. That same female biological structure may help explain why the vaccine works in women, the paper speculates: “Secretions containing antibodies and migratory white cells constantly bathe this membrane. HSV-specific responses induced by vaccination could act locally to provide an immunologic barrier to acquisition at this mucosal site that is not applicable to men.†Stanberry said the researchers suspect that a new adjuvant—a novel combination of substances called alum and 3-O-deacylated-monophosphoryl lipid A, designed to make the vaccine more potent in generating an immune system response—may make the vaccine work differently in women than in men by inducing a cascade of useful immune responses in the vaginal-cervical mucous membranes. The so-called adjuvant vaccine consists of a genetically altered snippet of the HSV-2 virus called HSV-2 glycoprotein-D-subunit plus the adjuvant. Stanberry said animal studies suggest that the vaccine also may have a protective effect in women against acquiring HSV-1 as well as against HSV-2. HSV-1— oral herpes—can cause herpes keratitis, an eye inflammation that can lead to blindness, herpes encephalitis, a potentially fatal inflammation of the brain, and gingivostomatis, an extremely painful inflammation of the mouth, mostly in children. “If further testing confirms that this vaccine is effective against HSV-1 as well as against HSV-2,†Stanberry said, “I can envision a day when younger girls are vaccinated once to protect them against HSV-1 and then get a booster shot again before puberty to protect them down the road†against the sexually transmitted type 2 virus. The HSV-2 glycoprotein-D-adjuvant vaccine is currently available only to those participating in clinical trials. If those tests continue to prove successfu l and the Food and Drug Administration gives the new vaccine a green light, the new vaccine could be on the market in about five years. GlaxoKline Biologicals of Rixensart, Belgium, and GlaxoKline Pharmaceuticals of Collegeville, Pa., funded the newly reported studies. Note: Women wishing to enroll in expanded clinical trials of the new anti-herpes vaccine may contact the UTMB Center for Clinical Studies at (281) 333-2288. -UTMB-  Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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