http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_1005000/1005887.stm
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Monday, 6 November, 2000, 14:25 GMT Clues
to vaccine failure
Vaccines may have to be re-designed The
effectiveness of vaccines may depend on how many prior infections a patient
has suffered, scientists have found. The finding, from a team at Imperial
College London, could mean that the timing and design of the vaccines may
have to change. The researchers, working on vaccines for
lung infections, have shown for the first time that the previous infection
history of an individual greatly affects the duration and severity of
subsequent infections.
Currently, most vaccines are tested on
animals that have not previously been exposed to other lung infections. This means their development takes no
account of the potential impact that previous infections may have had on the
individuals who are to be vaccinated. Lead researcher Dr Tracy Hussell said:
"This is quite unrealistic when you are trying to vaccinate a human
population which would have seen a number of infections at various stages of
their lives." Dr Hussell and her collaborators have been
working on Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV). They have shown that mice which have been
previously infected with influenza do not suffer the characteristic symptoms
of RSV - weight loss, illness and lung eosinophilia - when they are
subsequently infected with RSV. Dr Hussell said: "What we have found
is that one viral infection in the lung profoundly changes the way we respond
to an unrelated infection at the same site. "By 'educating' itself, the immune
system actually improves the way we respond to a second unrelated
infection." At present, there is no human vaccine for
RSV, but scientists are carrying out work on animals. Vaccine withdrawn A vaccine containing an inactivated, dead
form of the RSV virus was tested on children in the 1960s. But it had to be withdrawn following the
deaths of some vaccinated children who were infected by RSV in the community
- illustrating the point that vaccines do not work in the same way for all
who take them. The youngest children with the less mature
immune systems were those who were found to be most at risk. However, the older children who had more
experienced immune systems were not so badly affected. Co-researcher Dr Gerhard Walzl said:
"Presumably, the older children would have encountered a number of
infections in their lungs before they received the vaccine. "This will have protected them from
the harmful effects of the inactivated RSV vaccine." RSV is the most common cause of viral
bronchiolitis, an inflammatory reaction in the lower airways, in infants and
young children in the western world. It may lead to asthma and allergies in
later life. A life-threatening infection, RSV affects very young children
because of their immature immune system, and because their lungs are not
fully developed. Elderly people are affected too, because of
their waning immunity. The research is published in the Journal of
Experimental Medicine. |
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See also: 20 Oct
00 | Health 13 Oct
00 | Health 02 Aug
00 | Health Internet links: Imperial College of Science, Technology
and Medicine Journal of Experimental Medicine
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