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Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

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  • Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

    Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releas...-mwh061209.php

    Public release date: 12-Jun-2009
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    Contact: Annette Whibley
    wizard.media@virgin.net
    Wiley-Blackwell

    Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

    Almost 90 per cent of the world's population will not have timely access to affordable supplies of vaccines and antiviral agents in the current influenza pandemic, but it is possible that inexpensive generic drugs that are readily available, even in developing countries, could save millions of lives.

    That's the conclusion reached by an extensive review and analysis by immunisation expert Dr David Fedson, published online by Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses within hours of the World Health Organization declaring a pandemic.

    Dr Fedson points out that seasonal flu resistance to antiviral drugs like Tamiflu may make them ineffective in the pandemic and maintains that without effective drugs some countries will have to rely on 19th century public health measures to see them through the outbreak.

    He is calling for urgent and sharply focused research to determine whether drugs that reduce inflammation or modify the host response - the way that the body responds to infection or injury - could be used to manage the pandemic. And he believes that a lot could be learnt from the work done on these commonly available generic drugs - which include drugs to lower cholesterol and treat diabetes - by scientists not involved in influenza research.

    "Despite the best efforts of influenza scientists, pharmaceutical companies and health officials, the stark reality is that although studies of the molecular characteristics of influenza viruses have been enormously informative, they have failed to explain the system-wide effects that flu has on people who contract it.

    "For example we still don't understand why so many young adults died in the 1918 pandemic, while the death rate for children was much lower. I believe this is because researchers have focused on studying the actual virus rather than how these particular hosts ? the children and young people ? responded to the virus.

    "Most of the world's population lack realistic alternatives for confronting the next pandemic and urgent research is vital. Otherwise people everywhere might be faced with an unprecedented public health crisis."

    Dr Fedson maintains that experiments by non-influenza scientists have defined common cell signalling pathways for acute lung injury caused by different agents, including the inactivated H5N1 influenza virus (bird flu).

    "Research suggests that giving patients anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory agents such as statins, fibrates and glitazones could help to regulate the cell signalling pathways in patients who have suffered acute lung injury, a common problem with influenza" he says. "They can also help to reverse the cellular dysfunction and cell damage that accompanies multi-organ failure.

    "Cell signalling pathways play essential roles in the ability of cells to perceive and correctly respond to their microenvironment. They form the basis of development, tissue repair, immunity and normal tissue function.

    "Statins are commonly used to lower cholesterol and prevent heart disease - but have also been shown to be effective in reducing hospitalisations and deaths from pneumonia. Fibrates modify fatty acid metabolism and glitazones reduce blood glucose levels in type 2 diabetes. All of these drugs modify the cell signalling pathways involved in acute lung injury and multi-organ failure. Moreover, they are affordable generic drugs that are widely available even in developing countries."

    Dr Fedson points out that there is currently no logistical plan to distribute supplies of pandemic vaccines to the non-vaccine producing countries that contain 88 per cent of the world's population.

    "In all likelihood, people in these countries won't be able to obtain supplies of pandemic vaccines or they will get them too late" he says.

    "Many health officials have placed their hopes on stockpiles of antiviral agents, but resistance to the most widely stockpiled agent, Tamiflu, in seasonal flu outbreaks, has prompted concerns that similar resistance could develop in any pandemic virus.

    "It's estimated that countries that do not produce influenza vaccines will only have enough antivirals to treat one per cent of their combined populations.

    "At a scientific meeting in 2008 we heard that all of the people who developed bird flu in Indonesia, and did not receive antiviral treatment, died. This observation is terrifying. If this particular virus were to develop efficient human-to-human transmission we could see a global population collapse.

    "Swine flu has only recently emerged so we have had less time to study its effects. But any influenza pandemic is cause for great concern regardless of what strain it is."

    International influenza expert and journal editor Dr Alan Hampson says that it is essential that the focus on swine flu doesn't distract health professionals from the risk still posed by bird flu, which is continuing to rise, particularly in Egypt.

    "Wouldn't it be a terrible irony if bird flu suddenly achieved the ability to transmit readily in humans, possibly aided by widespread infection of swine flu and that fact that most of our resources are focussing on that" he says.

    Dr Hampson, who has worked extensively with the World Health Organization and is an influenza advisor to the Australian Government, says that the WHO recommended that all countries should develop pandemic preparedness plans.

    "However, web-based evidence suggests that only 45 countries have produced plans so far and these tend to be the more developed countries, who may be less vulnerable" he says.

    ###

    Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses is the first journal to specialise exclusively on influenza and other respiratory viruses. It is the official journal of the International Society for Influenza and Other Respiratory Virus Diseases (www.isirv.org), an independent scientific professional society promoting the prevention, detection, treatment, and control of influenza and other respiratory virus diseases.

    The journal is providing all of its content free online at www.influenzajournal.com and fast-tracking the publication of articles to help clinicians stay up-to-date with the latest research and expert commentary.

    Notes to editors

    Paper: Confronting the next influenza pandemic with anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory agents: why they are needed and how they might work. Fedson D. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses. 3.4, 129-142 (June 2009). Editorial: The 'novel' influenza A(HINI) enigma: is it a pandemic, how should we respond, what should we call it. Hampson A. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 3.4, 119-120. (June 2009). Fast-tracked papers will appear in the online early section of the website (www.influenzajournal.com) ahead of publication of the full issue.

    Dr David Fedson is the author of more than 160 scientific articles, chapters and reports on his specialist field of adult immunization and the recipient of a prestigous American award for this work in this field. He is the founder and co-ordinator of the Macroepidemiology of Influenza Study Group and has been active in exploring the possibility of using anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory agents for the treatment and prophylaxis of pandemic influenza.

    Dr Alan Hampson is a virologist with over 40 years' experience working in basic research on influenza, vaccine development, WHO surveillance programmes and public health. He is a consultant, advisor to government, chair of an advocacy group for best practice prevention and treatment of influenza and editor-in-chief of Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses.

    Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses is the first journal to specialise exclusively on influenza and other respiratory viruses and strives to play a key role in the dissemination of information in this broad and challenging field. It is aimed at laboratory and clinical scientists, public health professionals, and others around the world involved in a broad range of activities in this field. Topics covered include: surveillance, epidemiology, prevention by vaccines, prevention and treatment by antivirals, clinical studies, public health and pandemic preparedness, basic scientific research and transmission between animals and humans. www.influenzajournal.com

    It is the official journal of the International Society for Influenza and Other Respiratory Virus Diseases, an independent scientific professional society promoting the prevention, detection, treatment, and control of influenza and other respiratory virus diseases. www.isirv.org

    Wiley-Blackwell is the international scientific, technical, medical and scholarly publishing business of John Wiley & Sons, with strengths in every major academic and professional field and partnerships with many of the world's leading societies. Wiley-Blackwell publishes over 1,400 peer-reviewed journals as well as 1,500+ new books annually in print and online, as well as databases, major reference works and laboratory protocols. For more information, please visit www.wileyblackwell.com or www.interscience.wiley.com

  • #2
    Re: Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

    bttt !

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    • #3
      Re: Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

      Originally posted by Shiloh View Post
      Paper: Confronting the next influenza pandemic with anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory agents: why they are needed and how they might work. Fedson D. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses. 3.4, 129-142 (June 2009). Editorial: The 'novel' influenza A(HINI) enigma: is it a pandemic, how should we respond, what should we call it. Hampson A. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 3.4, 119-120. (June 2009). Fast-tracked papers will appear in the online early section of the website (www.influenzajournal.com) ahead of publication of the full issue.
      Does anyone have a link or copy of this paper yet?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

        Drugmakers rush to produce a swine flu vaccine

        By MARIA CHENG ? 38 minutes ago

        LONDON (AP) ? With swine flu now an official pandemic, the race is on among drugmakers to produce a vaccine. GlaxoSmithKline said Thursday after the World Health Organization declared a global flu epidemic that it would be ready within weeks to begin large-scale vaccine production. Sanofi-Aventis also said it had started working on its own version. On Friday, Swiss pharma giant Novartis announced it had created an experimental vaccine that has not been tested in people. Novartis' vaccine was made via a cell-based technology that may prove faster than the traditional way of making vaccines, which relies on chicken eggs.

        Many rich countries like Britain, Canada and France signed contracts with pharmaceuticals long ago, guaranteeing them access to pandemic vaccine. WHO and others estimate that about 2.4 billion doses of pandemic vaccine could be available in about a year.

        The likely scramble for vaccines will leave many people in poorer countries empty-handed.

        So far, swine flu has been mostly detected in developed countries like the United States, Europe, Japan and Australia.

        "We do not know how this virus will behave under conditions typically found in the developing world," WHO chief Dr. Margaret Chan said Thursday. She said the agency expects to see a "bleaker" picture as the virus makes its way to Africa and Asia.

        WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl said officials were concerned people in poorer countries and those fighting other health problems like malaria, tuberculosis, malnutrition and pneumonia might be more susceptible to swine flu.

        On Friday, WHO said that 74 countries had reported nearly 30,000 cases including 145 deaths. But so far, the virus appears to be mild. Most people don't need medical treatment to get better.

        But the virus might have a more devastating effect in people with underlying health problems. About half of the people who have died from swine flu have had complications like asthma, diabetes, and obesity.

        "Any population that has health challenges is potentially going to be at higher risk with H1N1 (swine flu)," Hartl said.

        In May, officials led by Chan and U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon asked vaccine makers to save a portion of their production for poor countries. Chan was aiming to get 10 percent of the global pandemic vaccine supply reserved for poor nations.

        Some companies have agreed to help. GlaxoSmithKline PLC offered to donate 50 million doses of pandemic vaccine to WHO for distribution to developing countries.

        During the bird flu crisis, Sanofi-Aventis promised WHO about 60 million doses based on the H5N1 strain. WHO is now talking with Sanofi to switch some or all of those vaccines over to swine flu doses.

        Because more than 95 percent of flu vaccines are still made in eggs, experts say the Novartis announcement is unlikely to significantly boost the world's pandemic vaccine supply.

        But the news pushed up Novartis shares by 4.4 percent to close at 45 Swiss francs ($41.84) on the Zurich exchange Friday.

        WHO and nongovernment organizations like Oxfam are continuing to ask drugmakers to make some of their pandemic vaccines available for poorer countries at a cheaper price, as well as asking donor countries and organizations to pay for the doses.

        But in a pandemic situation, WHO's attempts to secure vaccine for the poor and even the contracts countries have signed with drugmakers may make little difference to who actually gets the vaccine, some experts say.

        In previous pandemics, vaccines have never left the country where they are made before all of that country's own needs have been met.

        "WHO can say whatever it wishes, but pharmaceutical companies will take their marching orders from the politicians," said David Fedson, a vaccines expert and former professor of medicine at the University of Virginia.

        "Do you think any doses of vaccine made in France, Germany, the Czech Republic or anywhere will be allowed out to go to other countries just because there's a contract?" Fedson said.

        Ultimately, Fedson said health officials and politicians will have to deal with a limited amount of vaccine for the billions worldwide who want it. "There's a lot of dirtiness in vaccine politics," he said. "We may try our best, but we won't succeed in doing what's necessary."

        Copyright ? 2009 The Associated Press.

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        • #5
          Re: Majority won't have access to antivirals in pandemic but generic drugs could help prevent deaths

          Originally posted by St Michael View Post
          Does anyone have a link or copy of this paper yet?
          I found it and posted it here:

          Dr. Fedson: Confronting the next influenza pandemic with anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory agents

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