First data on Ebola vaccines expected in December

Tests on two experimental Ebola vaccines should produce data soon and could lead to larger medical trials in West Africa by January, a top World Health Organisation official has said.

First data on Ebola vaccines expected in December

Tests on two experimental Ebola vaccines should produce data soon and could lead to larger medical trials in West Africa by January, a top World Health Organisation official has said.

Dr Marie Paule Kieny, an assistant director general for WHO, said clinical trials either planned or underway in Europe, Africa and the US are expected to produce preliminary safety data by December.

In the meantime, she said, governments are pushing for immediate “real-world use” of an approved Ebola vaccine.

She told reporters in Geneva there are two leading candidates for a vaccine. If the vaccines are deemed safe, tens of thousands of doses will be used in trials in West Africa beginning in January to test their effectiveness, she said.

One of those vaccines, developed by the US National Institutes of Health and GlaxoSmithKline from a modified chimpanzee cold virus and an Ebola protein, is in clinical trials in the UK and in Mali.

It will be used in clinical trials in Lausanne, Switzerland, by the start of February.

The second front-runner, developed by the Public Health Agency of Canada and known as VSV-EBOV, has been sent to the US Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Maryland for testing on healthy volunteers, with results expected by December.

The next stage would be to test it more broadly, including among those directly handling Ebola cases in West Africa.

Canada has donated 800 vials of the experimental vaccine to WHO but the shipment was delayed by a Lufthansa pilots strike.

It is now expected to arrive in Switzerland on Wednesday for testing co-ordinated by the UN health agency among volunteers at the University Hospital of Geneva, and volunteers in Hamburg, Germany, and in Gabon and Kenya, Dr Kieny said.

“These data are absolutely crucial to allow decision-making on what dose level should go in the efficacy testing in Africa,” she said, referring to plans for the broader testing starting in 2015.

At a separate news conference, WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib promised a thorough public audit of the agency’s early missteps in responding to the Ebola outbreak that has already killed more than 4,500 people, mostly in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, since it emerged 10 months ago.

“There is certainly a wish and a will to have this review,” she said. “We know many elements need to be explained in the future. WHO will do that, but in the future; now our focus is on the response.”

Experts have said the world could face 10,000 new cases a week in two months if authorities do not take stronger steps to fight the deadly virus.

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