WASHINGTON (AP) - A laboratory test for the effectiveness of smallpox
vaccines has been developed by a team of European researchers and it may be used
as Americans start receiving shots against the disease.
In a study appearing this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, scientists in Germany and France report they have discovered a test
that can determine if a candidate smallpox vaccine can prompt protection against
the disease in humans.
The test also could be used to determine if a person actually develops
defenses against smallpox after being vaccinated. The large majority will
develop immunity, but not everyone.
Dr. Bernard Moss at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, one of the National Institutes of Health, said the research is
important because no scientist has ever identified in the human immune system
the types of responses needed to protect against smallpox.
There was little interest in smallpox research after the disease was
conquered worldwide in the 1970s, he said. A detailed scientific study and
understanding of the human immune system did not develop until the 1980s, long
after interest in smallpox had waned, he said.
``This finding will be very useful,'' said Moss.
The first author of the PNAS study is Gerd Sutter of the GSF-Institut fur
Molekulare Virologie in Munich, Germany.
Researchers are developing new and safer smallpox vaccines and the new
laboratory technique can test the effectiveness of those vaccines. Additionally,
Moss said such a test could determine if people vaccinated against smallpox
develop the immune system cells needed to protect against infection from the
disease.
Smallpox shots were stopped in the United States in 1972, and the last
natural case of smallpox is thought to have occurred in 1977. The disease was
declared eradicated in 1980.
But American officials believe rogue nations may have smallpox specimens that
they could use to mount a bioterrorist attack. As a result, military personnel
and some medical workers are expected to be vaccinated soon. The vaccine will be
available to the general public next year, but it is not recommended because of
concerns about vaccine safety. It is estimated one to two people per million
receiving the shot will die from side effects.
That's why researchers are trying to develop a smallpox vaccine that is as
effective, but safer, than the current one.
On the Net:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: http://www.pnas.org
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