http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4282088,00.html
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Humans
to test new TB vaccines Sarah Boseley, health
editor Monday October 22,
2001 The first new vaccine in
80 years for tuberculosis is about to be tested on humans in Oxford, offering
potential hope for millions around the world. The disease kills 2m a
year worldwide. In Africa it is the main cause of death of people who are HIV
positive, but its incidence is rising in Britain. The existing vaccine,
BCG (bacille Calmette Guerin - named after the French scientists who invented
it), was introduced in 1921. Given to children, it protects against certain
forms of tuberculosis but it wears off after 10 years, and offers no
protection to adults against the lung disease. According to the public
health laboratory service, there were 6,797 TB cases last year. There are
also fears that drug resistant strains of TB could arrive in Britain from
some parts of the developing world and the former Soviet Union. The trial will be led by
Helen McShane of Oxford University, who has been awarded a fellowship by the
Wellcome Trust for the £690,000 six-year study. She hopes the new vaccine
will be given in addition to the BCG to offer protection in adulthood. "It is based on the
old smallpox vaccine," she said. "It is a recombinant smallpox
vaccine which has a little bit of TB in it." One advantage of this
strategy , also being used in HIV and malaria vaccines under development, is
that the particular smallpox strain was widely used decades ago before the
disease was eliminated and vaccinations ended, meaning doctors are optimistic
the strain is safe. In Oxford, routine BCG vaccinations in schools stopped in
1981 so there are people who have never had any protection. · The fatal impact of meningitis
among children is on the wane, partly because of earlier recognition and
treatment, according to new research. Studies at Alder Hey
children's hospital, Liverpool, and St Mary's hospital, London, also ascribed
the fall to a new vaccine for meningitis C, said an article in Archives of
Disease in Childhood. |
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