WHO meets on production of swine flu vaccine
GENEVA - As swine flu cases topped 6,600
worldwide, vaccine makers and other experts met Thursday at the World
Health Organization to discuss the tough decisions that must be made
quickly to fight the evolving virus.
Pharmaceutical companies are ready to begin
making a swine flu vaccine — but as the virus may mutate, questions
abound: How much should be produced? How will it be distributed? Who
should get it?
The expert group’s recommendations will be
passed to WHO Director-General Margaret Chan, who is expected to issue
advice to vaccine manufacturers and the World Health Assembly next week.
WHO’s flu chief said the meeting of industry
representatives and independent experts sought to answer questions
including when to recommend to manufacturers that they switch from a
seasonal vaccine to one that works against the pandemic strain.
“No big decisions, no announcements,” Keiji
Fukuda told reporters after the meeting. “These are enormously
complicated questions, and they are not something that anyone can make
in a single meeting.”
But some feel the main decision has already
been made.
“It’s a foregone conclusion,” said David
Fedson, a vaccines expert and former professor of medicine at the
University of Virginia. “If we don’t invest in an H1N1 (swine flu)
vaccine, then possibly we could have a reappearance of this virus in a
mild, moderate, or catastrophic form and we would have absolutely
nothing.”
Most flu vaccine companies can only make one
vaccine at a time: seasonal flu vaccine or pandemic vaccine. Production
takes months and it is impossible to switch halfway through if health
officials make a mistake.
Vaccine makers can make limited amounts of
both seasonal flu vaccine and pandemic vaccine — though not at the same
time — but they cannot make massive quantities of both because that
exceeds manufacturing capacity.
“What is really going to be wrestled with is
that seasonal influenza itself has a significant impact on people,” said
Fukuda. “This is an infection which is estimated to kill some hundreds
of thousands of people each year around the world, so there is a real
trade-off if you just say we’re going to stop making that vaccine.”
At the moment, health officials aren’t sure
how deadly swine flu is, and whether they will need more seasonal flu
vaccine or swine flu vaccine. And if the swine flu mutates, scientists
aren’t sure how effective a vaccine made now from the current strain
will remain.
WHO estimates that up to 2 billion doses of
swine flu vaccine could be produced every year, though the first batches
wouldn’t be available for four to six months.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention is currently working on a “seed stock” to make the vaccine,
which should be ready in the next couple of weeks. That will be
distributed to manufacturers worldwide so they can start producing the
vaccine.
Until vaccine manufacturers get the seed
stock, they won’t know how many doses of vaccine they can make or how
long that would take. Sanofi Pasteur, the world’s biggest vaccine
producer, said Thursday it is waiting for the green light from WHO
before it starts making swine flu vaccine.
WHO is also negotiating with vaccine producers
like GlaxoSmithKline PLC to save some of their swine flu vaccine for
poorer nations. Many rich nations like Britain, Canada, Denmark, France,
Switzerland and the United States signed deals with vaccine makers years
ago to guarantee them pandemic vaccines as soon as they’re available.
As of Thursday, at least 33 countries reported
more than 6,600 cases of swine flu worldwide, with 70 deaths. The
figures are based on tallies provided by national governments and WHO.
According to the global body’s pandemic alert level, the world is at
phase 5 — out of a possible 6 — meaning that a global outbreak is
“imminent.”
“It’s a no-brainer,” Fedson said of the
decision to make swine flu vaccine. “All that’s being discussed now is
the details of how to make sure you have enough seasonal flu vaccine and
the logistics of making the switch to H1N1 vaccine production.”
While the vaccine question hangs in the air, WHO has given Indian
pharmaceuticals giant Cipla the medical go-ahead to produce a generic
version of the anti-viral medication Tamiflu. The drug, also known as
oseltamivir, is one of two anti-virals shown to work against swine flu.
WHO said Cipla’s generic version was as
effective as the original made by Swiss firm Roche Holding AG and would
hopefully make the drug more accessible to poor countries.
North America has been the hardest-hit
continent. The United States has reported 3,352 laboratory-confirmed
cases of swine flu, including four deaths. Arizona officials reported
Thursday the latest case, a woman in her late 40s who died last week
from what appeared to be complications from the illness.
On Thursday, New York City closed three
schools in response to a swine flu outbreak that has left an assistant
principal in critical condition and sent hundreds of kids home with flu
symptoms, in a flare-up of the virus that sent shock waves through the
world last month.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg said that four
students and the assistant principal have documented cases of swine flu
at a Queens middle school.
Mexico has 2,656 cases and 64 deaths, while
Canada has 389 cases with one death, according to WHO figures.
Mexico confirmed 374 more cases Thursday including four more deaths, but
Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova said the new cases show the virus is
appearing less deadly. Mexico’s swine flu deaths now represent 2.4
percent of its confirmed cases, he said.
Spain and Britain have the most cases in
Europe, at 100 and 78 respectively.
In Central America, Costa Rica has eight cases
and one death and Panama has 29 cases.