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YEOH EN-LAI : Associated Press Writer
Jun 19, 2003 : 8:12 am ET
SINGAPORE --
As SARS subsides, governments need to
pour more money into finding a vaccine to prevent the virus from
striking again in a mutated form, the World Health Organization said
Thursday.
The coronavirus that causes severe acute
respiratory syndrome is mutating faster than previously thought --
making vaccine research difficult, but even more necessary, said
Marie-Paule Kieny, head of the World Health Organization's
Initiative for Vaccine Research.
"The number of mutations is up. How difficult
it is to come up with a vaccine? We will know in the coming months,"
she told a WHO-sponsored conference on SARS research in Singapore.
Governments cannot afford to rely solely on
private pharmaceutical companies to develop a vaccine against the
flu-like illness that has killed about 800 people and sickened more
than 8,400 worldwide, mostly in Asia.
New cases spiked in March and April, but have
plunged in recent weeks.
"Vaccine manufacturers have to make profits,"
she said. "If the market for SARS disappears, then their
involvement, understandably, will reduce."
Previously researchers had said that although
the coronavirus must have mutated to jump from animals to humans, it
didn't appear to be mutating rapidly and on the contrary appeared
remarkably stable.
However, several scientists speaking at the
conference presented fresh evidence that the coronavirus which
causes SARS is mutating and could evolve into something more
dangerous.
"How mutable is SARS? The mutations allow for
species jumping. It is highly adaptable to humans," said Michael Lai
from the University of Southern California's department of
microbiology and immunology.
Research must focus on the transforming virus
and how it could mask itself from current models of detection, Kieny
said.
"The virus evolves," she said. "We have to
monitor its diversity and its potential evolution."
About 500 scientists and doctors attended the
conference, held a day after another WHO conference in neighboring
Malaysia where countries shared lessons they learned battling the
deadly illness.
The slowdown in the spread of the virus has
given scientists time to delve deeper into vaccine and mutation
research, said Mark Salter, the head of the WHO's global alert
system.
"In the coming weeks, new and innovative
ideas will come to the fore," Salter said.
"Failure in the face of SARS is not an
option," he said.
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