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New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

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  • New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry



    New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultryTuesday, May 23, 2006 Posted: 1220 GMT (2020 HKT)

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    Manage Alerts | What Is This? WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A bird flu vaccine piggybacked onto a widely used vaccine against another bird virus could be a quick and easy way to protect poultry against the H5N1 avian influenza virus, researchers said on Monday.

    Two separate teams of researchers came up with a combination that is easy to make, protects chickens well and could be sprayed onto flocks.

    Plus the vaccines are formulated in a way that answers the concerns that a bird flu vaccine could actually mask an outbreak, or could make trade in poultry products from vaccinated flocks more difficult, the researchers wrote in reports published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    "This is clearly only a chicken vaccine," cautioned Dr. Peter Palese of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, who worked on one of the vaccines.

    That is because it is based on the widely used vaccine against Newcastle disease, another scourge of poultry but one which, unlike H5N1, does not affect people.

    This is the vaccine's advantage, however, Palese said. Dozens of companies make Newcastle virus vaccine, which is easy to give to chickens.

    "They send a guy into these closed houses with hundreds of thousands of chickens and just spray it," Palese said in a telephone interview. It's very cheap to administer. It costs a fraction of a cent per dose."

    The H5N1 virus has accelerated its spread among birds, moving out of East Asia across the Asian continent and into most of Europe and many parts of Africa. Experts expect it will eventually become entrenched among birds globally.

    It has killed or forced the slaughter of hundreds of millions of birds and occasionally infects people.

    It has killed 123 people so far, all of whom have had contact of some sort with infected birds, but experts fear this virus has an especially good chance of mutating into a form that could pass easily from human to human, causing a pandemic.

    The best way to control it, experts also agree, is to contain it in birds. And other avian flu viruses, including the H7N7 and H9N2 strains, can also ruin commercial flocks and can occasionally sicken humans.

    Palese and colleagues grafted a piece of the H7N7 virus onto the Newcastle virus used in a commercial vaccine. It protected 90 percent of the chickens, they said.

    Angela Roemer-Oberdoerfer and colleagues at the Friedrich Loeffler Institut at the Federal Research Institute for Animal Health in Riems, Germany, made a similar vaccine using H5N1.

    Theirs worked well, too, and the formulation overcame some of the objections to vaccinating chickens against avian influenza.

    Some of the avian influenza vaccines for chickens that are now used allow the birds to spread the virus without appearing ill, and many countries will not import poultry products from vaccinated chickens.

    In addition, when scientists test birds, it is impossible to tell whether a chicken has antibodies against influenza because it was vaccinated or because it was infected.

    This vaccine can easily be detected in a blood test and did not allow the birds to "shed," or transmit, the virus, Roemer-Oberdoerfer's team reported.

    And they believe their approach could work in people.

    Considering the current threat of pandemic H5N1, this approach should seriously be considered, they wrote.

    Palese disagreed, saying current methods using other viruses are better.

    "It theoretically is possible, but not realistic," he said.

    People do not naturally get Newcastle disease, Palese noted. Human vaccines usually employ a virus that easily infect humans, to get a safe and effective immune system response.

    Copyright 2006 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

  • #2
    Re: New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

    Great, more asymptomatic spreaders!!!

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    • #3
      Re: New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

      Do you have data or links on this DB?

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      • #4
        Re: New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

        Mingus,

        I cannot find the link right now but it is well documented that vaccinated poultry can still carry and shed the virus and infect unvaccinated poultry.

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        • #5
          Re: New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

          Vaccinated poultry shed virus topics:



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          • #6
            Re: New bird flu vaccine easier to apply to poultry

            Thank you Mellie!!!!

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