Paris (AFP) - Scientists have
taken a major step towards creating a vaccine that works against
multiple strains of influenza, according to two studies published Monday
in top journals.
A "universal vaccine" is the holy grail of immunisation efforts against the flu, a
shape-shifting virus which kills up to half a million people each year,
according the World Health Organization.
There have been several killer pandemics in the last century -- the 1918 Spanish Flu outbreak claimed at least 20 million lives.
Existing
vaccines target a part of the virus that mutates constantly, forcing
drug makers and health officials to concoct new anti-flu cocktails every
year.
In the two studies,
published in Nature and Science, researchers tested new vaccines on
mice, ferrets and monkeys that duplicate another, more stable, part of
the virus.
Scientists have
long known that the stem of haemagglutinin -- a spike-like protein,
known as HA, on the surface of the virus -- remains largely the same
even when the tip, or "head", changes.
The next step was to immunise mice and ferrets, then injecting them with the H5N1 "bird flu" that has a mortality rate of more than 50 percent among people but is not very contagious.
The mice were completely protected against the flu, the researchers found.
And most of the ferrets, the species that best predicts the success of influenza vaccines on humans, did not fall ill either.
Moreover, when a new batch of mice was injected with antibodies from the rodents which had survived the previous round, most of them also shook off what should have been a lethal dose of bird flu.
The
other study, led by Antonietta Impagliazzo of the Crucell Vaccine
Institute in Leiden, the Netherlands, took a similar approach -- also
creating an HA "stem-only" vaccine.
Other scientists not involved in the studies described them as a major step towards a universal vaccine, but cautioned that a lot of work has to be done, possibly over many years, before a vaccine can be tested on humans.
"This is an exciting development, but the new vaccines now need to be tested in clinical trials to see how well they work in humans," said Sara Gilbert of the University of Oxford, adding that it will take years to reach that point.
"This is an important proof of concept for this vaccine approach," David Morens, a senior advisor at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the US National Institutes of Health, said of the Nature study.
"If
this type of immunity can be elicited, then in theory a vaccinated
person could be protected against any influenza virus including viruses
that have yet to emerge from avian or mammalian reservoirs."
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