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Prep work: bird-flu vaccine might work better with primer.


Avian-influenza virus is evolving, so no one can predict the exact genetic makeup of a killer bird-flu strain that would spread from person to person and cause a pandemic pandemic /pan·dem·ic/ (pan-dem´ik)
1. a widespread epidemic of a disease.

2. widely epidemic.


pan·dem·ic
adj.
Epidemic over a wide geographic area.

n.
. So, if such a strain arose, manufacturers would be hard-pressed to rapidly make enough effective vaccine.

Scientists are looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 ways to stretch the amount of vaccine that would be available. One team now reports that priming people against bird flu bird flu: see influenza.
bird flu
 or avian influenza

viral respiratory disease, mainly of birds including poultry and waterbirds but also transmissible to humans.
 with an existing, if not perfectly specific, vaccine might render a specially tailored one more potent during a pandemic.

Currently, three strains of the bird-flu virus, called H5N1, are known to infect people. Nega Ali Goji, a physician at the University of Rochester The University of Rochester (UR) is a private, coeducational and nonsectarian research university located in Rochester, New York. The university is one of 62 elected members of the Association of American Universities.  School of Medicine and Dentistry, and his colleagues identified 37 people who 8 years ago had received two doses of an experimental vaccine against one H5N1 strain of bird flu. That strain from Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov.  was the first to jump the species barrier from birds to people.

In their study, Goji and his colleagues administered a recently developed bird-flu vaccine that targets an H5N1 strain identified in Vietnam in 2004. Each of the 37 volunteers from the earlier study received a single injection into muscle, as did 103 people who hadn't been previously vaccinated against bird flu.

Four weeks after the injection, the people primed with the earlier vaccine had made, on average, more than four times as many antibodies against the virus as the people in the other group had, says Goji, who presented the findings last week in Toronto at a meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America The Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) is a medical association representing physicians, scientists and other health care professionals who specialize in infectious diseases. .

"If this is confirmed in larger studies, a prepandemic-vaccination program could be considered," Goji says.

"This was definitely a very positive finding," says Kathleen M. Neuzil, an infectious-disease physician at the University of Washington in Seattle. But she cautions that the single dose of new vaccine given to people in this study was quite large.

The finding suggests that with pre-vaccination, a smaller dose of an emergency vaccine might be sufficient, says physician and study coauthor John Treanor, also of the University of Rochester.

At the same meeting, physician Shital M. Patel of Baylor College of Medicine Baylor College of Medicine is a private medical school located in Houston, Texas, USA on the grounds of the Texas Medical Center. It has been consistently rated the top medical school in Texas and among the best in the United States.  in Houston and her colleagues reported on another approach to economizing on bird-flu vaccine. They gave the new vaccine in three small doses, spread over several months, to 77 volunteers. Some doses were 1/30th the size of the shots that Goji and Treanor used. The vaccine was injected just under the skin, which can boost effectiveness (SN: 11/13/04, p. 307). Nonetheless, the low doses failed to consistently produce a robust immune response immune response
n.
An integrated bodily response to an antigen, especially one mediated by lymphocytes and involving recognition of antigens by specific antibodies or previously sensitized lymphocytes.
.

Meanwhile, other data show that the spread of bird flu among people could be catastrophic. Between December 2003 and September 2006, the World Health Organization confirmed 247 cases of bird flu in people. Jeffrey S. Markowitz of Health Data Analytics in Princeton Junction, N.J., reported at the Toronto meeting that 58 percent of those people died, compared with a fatality rate fa·tal·i·ty rate
n.
See death rate.



fatality rate

see case fatality rate.
 of 2.5 percent during the flu pandemic of 1918.
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 21, 2006
Words:508
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