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| A student receives a temperature check
through an auto-thermometer before attending the national college entrance
examination in Beijing in this June 7, 2003 file photo. China was hit by
an outbreak of SARS between March and July that year.
(newsphoto) | BEIJING,
Jan. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- A SARS vaccine could be used among high-risk groups
in China in the event of a large-scale outbreak again this spring, say experts.
The inactivate vaccine was produced last May
following a year of intense research to find a vaccine for the virus which
sparked a global health scare when it emerged in early 2003.
Trials among 36 volunteers have proved effective and
safe in the first-phase human tests begun on May 22, 2004, said Yin Weiping,
managing director of Beijing-based Sinovac Biotech Co Ltd which has produced the
vaccine.
Yin heads China's SARS vaccine development group
working with experts from Beijing Sinovac, the Chinese Centre for Disease
Control and Prevention and the Chinese Academy of Medical Science.
Before early December 2004, antibodies, without
obvious side effects, had been found in all volunteers, who had the test
vaccine, said Yin.
His laboratory currently has a number of batches of
inactive vaccine - one made from viruses or bacteria that have been killed
through physical or chemical processes - and can produce more if necessary.
Although the vaccine has been produced and proven
effective primarily, "we cannot sell it to the public at present even if they
wanted to buy it," said Yin.
Normally, only after a vaccine has passed the
third-round of human trials in fighting an active virus which breaks out
naturally will it be provided to the public widely, he explained.
However, in the event of a sudden and widespread SARS
outbreak, some high-risk groups, such as doctors might be immunised ahead of
completion of the second and third round trials, said Dr Lin Jiangtao of
Beijing's Sino-Japanese Friendship Hospital, where the first tests were
conducted.
The memory of the spring of 2003 when SARS struck is
still fresh in the minds of many.
Between March and June 2003 some 5,327 people on the
Chinese mainland, most of whom were doctors and nurses were infected. A total of
349 people died.
With no vaccine yet available, the recurrence of SARS
kept the public on tenterhooks in the spring of last year.
The second-round of tests will involve further
experimental verification in many aspects, such as dosage and schedule for
injecting the vaccine to gain a better understanding of it and how it can best
be used.
A date for beginning the second-round of tests has
not been fixed, while the third-round of trials will necessarily involve
hundreds of volunteers in the event of another large-scale SARS outbreaks, Yin
Weiping noted.
Those in the first round trials only received an
antibody which has not been proven effective in fighting an active SARS virus.
"It is not possible for us to use an active virus on
those immunized to test whether the vaccine is effective," said Lin, who leads
the clinical testing in the hospital.
Research has shown that the antibody brought about by
the vaccine in animals is resistant to attacks by the active SARS virus, a
coronavirus.
Moreover, any new vaccine poses risks before it
proves itself against active virus outbreaks, said Yin Hongzhang, a division
director of the State Food and Drug Administration.
One major potential risk is that people who are
vaccinated might become even more vulnerable than those who are not, said Yin.
Currently, experts are following up people who took
part in the first-round test to record the reaction of their internal organs and
blood post-immunisation, said Lin.
The follow-up records of Lan Wanli, the first man to
be vaccinated on May 22, 2004, was completed after 210 days.
It showed he had suffered no untoward side-effects
and had developed an immunity to the virus, said Lin.
The last of the 36 volunteers vaccinated last August,
will be monitored until March, 2, 2005.
A 210 day period is considered by scientists the set
period for assessing a vaccine's efficacy.
These records provide valuable information for the
second-phase human trials, which will involve 300 volunteers, said Yin.
"Compared to the time when there was no SARS vaccine,
we now feel much less disquiet with spring approaching, because we now have a
powerful weapon," said Dr Lin.
His remark was echoed by one of the volunteers, Lan
Wanli, 23, a postgraduate student at Beijing University of Chemical Technology.
He experienced no untoward side-effects after being
vaccinated, and was reassured by the fact he had received the anti-SARS jab.
"It is a worthy cause for me to volunteer for the
vaccine test although there are lots of risks, the most serious one is that I
could be infected with the virus if the vaccine is unsafe," Lan said.
As a human guinea pig for the SARS trials Lan
underwent 14 hospital examinations and a series of blood tests.
Several days after China reported the results of its
first-round testing, researchers at the National Institute of Health (NIH) in
the United States began clinical trials of a SARS vaccine, Yin revealed.
(Source: China Daily) |