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  • "prime-and-boost"

    (catchy new name, eh?)
    http://www.kcautv.com/Global/story.a...33522&nav=1kgl

    WASHINGTON It's called "prime-and-boost" -- a method that scientists hope could kick-start people's protection against bird flu.

    Scientists have long wondered if giving shots in advance might help. The vaccine wouldn't fully protect, but would introduce people's immune systems to a brand new type of flu. Then, once a pandemic began, they'd need only one booster shot of vaccine tailored to the exact strain. It could significantly cut the time it would take to protect a population.


    On Friday, University of Rochester scientists will report the first evidence that the method could work.


    If the findings hold up, they raise the possibility of giving "priming" shots to doctors, nurses and other first-responders who would be on the front lines of a flu pandemic long before much vaccine was ready. They could even be offered to whoever wanted them.

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

  • #2
    Re: "prime-and-boost"

    long version of above...

    http://www.habersaglik.com/default.a...d=4&NwId=75612

    Merits of Novel Bird Flu Vaccine Studied

    A unique study suggests there may be a way to kick-start people's protection against bird flu just in case it triggers a worldwide outbreak years from now


    If a flu pandemic began, it would take several months to tailor a vaccine to the precise strain causing illness and then to make enough vaccine for every American. Worse, people almost certainly will require two doses to protect against a flu strain their bodies have never before encountered.

    Scientists have long wondered if giving shots in advance might help _ a vaccine that wouldn't fully protect but would introduce people's immune systems to a brand new type of flu. Then, once a pandemic began, they'd need only one booster shot of vaccine tailored to the exact strain, significantly cutting the time it would take to protect a population.

    Friday, University of Rochester scientists will report the first evidence that this so-called "prime-and-boost" method could work.

    If the findings hold up, they raise the possibility of giving "priming" shots to doctors, nurses and other first-responders who would be on the front lines of a flu pandemic long before much vaccine was ready _ or maybe even offering such shots to whoever wanted them.

    "You'd have people who were prepared as much as possible in advance," said Dr. John Treanor, a Rochester vaccine specialist who led the research. "It is something a lot of people are very, very interested in. It does have some major implications for policy."

    The researchers tracked down 37 people who had tested an experimental bird flu vaccine back in 1998. At the end of 2005, each got a single booster shot designed to fight a different strain of the H5N1 virus.

    H5N1is thought to have made its first jump from poultry into people in Hong Kong in 1997. The Rochester volunteers got their first inoculations with vaccine made from that Hong Kong strain.

    But the deadly Asian bird flu has continued evolving as it hop-scotched across the globe _ and the booster doses were made from a very different strain that emerged in Vietnam in 2004. The booster recipients were compared with people vaccinated for the first time against the Vietnam strain.

    The booster method worked better, Treanor and colleague Dr. Nega Ali Goji will report Friday at a meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

    More than twice as many of the booster recipients had a protective immune response compared to people given their first-ever dose of H5N1 vaccine. They even seemed a little more protected than those who got the optimal two doses.

    The findings are intriguing, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health, which funded the work.

    "It really does add some degree of scientific credibility to the issue of priming," Fauci said.

    But, he cautioned, much more research is needed before the government would even consider recommending advanced shots for bird flu: "Policy decisions would require considerably more information than we have."

    The work reflects what happens every winter with seasonal flu: When small children are first vaccinated against regular flu, they need two doses. After that, one shot a year is enough. Even though the strain that circulates each winter is slightly different, the shot awakens their immune system's memory of influenza just enough.
    "Your flu vaccine experience is a constant series of booster doses," Treanor explained.

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

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