| July 11, 2002 (7)
FDA says nasal spray flu vaccine needs no additional clinical
trials
ANN ARBOR The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has asked for
additional information, but no additional clinical trials, as it considers
approval of
FluMist, an influenza vaccine delivered as a nasal spray.
FluMist
was invented by
Hunein John Maassab after more than four decades of research at the
University of Michigan
School of
Public Health. Gaithersburg, Md.-based MedImmune has licensed the rights
to FluMist from U-M, and has a marketing agreement with pharmaceutical giant
Wyeth.
I am pleased that the FDA does not believe that additional clinical
trials are necessary. The efficacy of FluMist is clearly established. I
expect that MedImmune will be able to respond to any FDA questions. I am
happy to see this progress," Maassab said today (July 11). Maassab is on
medical leave from U-M and is unavailable for media interviews.
Rosemary Rochford, assistant professor of epidemiology, is the U-M
spokesperson on FluMist.
MedImmune planned a webcast at 5:30 p.m. July 11 to discuss the FDAs
response to its biologics license application for FluMist. The site is
http://www.medimmune.com. A replay of the webcast will be available via
MedImmunes website until midnight July 18.
A MedImmune press release on the FDAs response is
available at
http://investor.medimmune.com/news/20020711-84556.cfm?ReleaseID=84556 --
Maassab finished his doctoral dissertation on influenza in 1956, inspired
by his mentor, Dr. Thomas Francis Jr., who had overseen the U.S. Army's flu
vaccine program during World War II. Francis was founder of U-M's
epidemiology department and a mentor to Jonas Salk; he oversaw the polio
vaccine clinical trials conducted at U-M.
Maassab maintained his interest in flu, building on one finding after
another before ultimately coming to the approach used in FluMist, a
cold-adapted, live-attenuated, trivalent influenza virus vaccine.
Unlike traditional flu shots, which are made from killed viruses, FluMist
is designed with weakened live viruses that are modified to grow in the
cooler nasal passages but not in the warmer lungs, where flu develops. It
helps the recipient develop immunity at the site where the flu virus
typically enters the body, the nose. Trivalent means it would include three
strains of the flu virus because multiple strains of influenza virus
circulate in the population every year. The immune response is different to
each of these strains so an effective vaccine gives protection against each.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, millions of
Americans get the flu each year. An average of about 20,000 people in the
United States die from the flu annually, and 114,000 per year are admitted
to the hospital because of flu.
For more information:
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/fluinfo.htm
For background on Maassabs work on influenza at Michigan, including a
timeline of his research and biographical information:
http://www.sph.umich.edu/news_events/flumist/
This site also includes information on U-Ms Technology Transfer Office,
past media coverage, a list of related web sites, and photos of Maassab.
In January, MedImmune acquired Aviron, which previously held the license
for FluMist. For more on that merger, visit the MedImmune web site news
section:
http://investor.medimmune.com/news/20011203-66085.cfm
Editors: Rosemary Rochford, assistant professor of epidemiology, is
a close friend of Maassab and runs his labs at the School of Public Health.
She is available for interviews through July 12 to explain how FluMist works
and to talk about Maassabs dedication to this project.
Producers: U-M has professional studios and uplink capabilities.
B-roll footage of U-Ms campus and the School of Public Health are
available. Visit
http://www.sph.umich.edu/news_events/flumist/ and view a short John
Maassab tribute video, which includes an interview with Rosemary Rochford.
More information is available on Maassab, the flu, the FDA and
technology transfer of university inventions to private companies.
Photos of Maassab in his lab are available, as are B-roll of campus and
of the School of Public Health.
Contact: Colleen Newvine
Phone: (734) 764-7260
E-mail:
cnewvine@umich.edu
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