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MOBILIZING
Fearing
Bioterrorism, U.S. Orders Early Delivery of Vaccine
By AARON ZITNER, TIMES STAFF WRITER
WASHINGTON -- A federal health agency said Monday that it
had arranged for the maker of a smallpox vaccine to deliver millions of doses
next year--two to three years ahead of schedule--as a hedge against one of
the most feared forms of potential biological attack.
The action by the Department of Health and Human Services came as rising
fears of bioterrorism are throwing a renewed focus on vaccines as a method to
protect citizens and troops.
The Biotechnology Industry Assn. last week issued an "urgent"
inquiry to more than 1,000 companies asking, among other things, for their
ideas on ways to draw more companies into the vaccine business. And Defense
Department officials are sorting through how to boost their program to
vaccinate the armed forces against anthrax. Terrorism experts say it is
unlikely that the United States would face a biological attack. But more than
a dozen nations and terrorist groups are believed to have tried to develop
biological weapons, with varying degrees of effort and success. Anthrax is
considered one of the most likely lethal agents to be turned into a weapon,
and smallpox, although less likely, is feared because it is highly
contagious.
The federal government last year contracted with Acambis PLC, a British
company with operations in Cambridge, Mass., to produce 40 million doses of a
new type of smallpox vaccine. On Monday, however, the Department of Health
and Human Services said it had arranged for Acambis to deliver all 40 million
doses by mid- to late 2002, well ahead of the previous delivery date of 2004
or 2005.
Department spokesman Kevin Keane said federal regulators had met with Acambis
to set a faster timetable for production and approval of the vaccine. Keane
said that the meetings had been instigated by Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy G. Thompson, and that they included the Food and Drug
Administration and the National Institutes of Health.
News of the accelerated delivery was first reported Monday by the Wall Street
Journal.
Federal officials have about 15 million doses of an older smallpox vaccine on
hand. The government will stockpile both the old and new vaccines for use in
an emergency, Keane said, and will not make them available to doctors for
general preventive use by nervous citizens.
Similarly, there are no plans to make an anthrax vaccine available to the
public.
The anthrax regimen includes a series of vaccinations over 18 months,
followed by annual boosters, according to the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. Experts say that the immunity conferred by the
smallpox vaccine has probably diminished in all who received the shot, which
was last administered in the United States 25 years ago.
Since the Sept. 11 attacks, more than 1,000 people have contacted the sole
maker of a government-approved anthrax vaccine to ask about its availability.
The company, BioPort Corp. of Lansing, Mich., has received so many calls that
it is guiding people to a recorded message.
The company is making the vaccine only for the Department of Defense. BioPort
spokeswoman Kim Brennan Root said the company has held some internal
discussions about how to make the vaccine available to the general public.
But she could provide no timetable for when people might be able to obtain
the vaccine.
In case of an anthrax outbreak, health officials would draw on a government
antibiotics stockpile to treat citizens.
The Defense Department originally wanted to vaccinate all 2.4 million active
and reserve troops against anthrax, but it has scaled back its plans due to a
vaccine shortage.
Industry officials say that vaccine production is a tricky business proposition,
because investors are less willing to put up money for vaccines than for
other drugs.
Demand for many types of vaccine is uncertain, and companies fear being sued
by adult consumers who claim side effects, said Carl Feldbaum, president of
the Biotechnology Industry Assn. A special fund created by Congress gives the
industry certain protections from liability claims related to mandated
childhood vaccines.
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