LONDON: Swine flu vaccine manufacturers are on track to start delivering the first batches of it in September, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
Marie-Paule Kieny, WHO’s vaccine director, said several drug makers have started testing swine flu vaccine in humans, and that early safety results should be available next month, clearing the way for its use. Kieny also insisted that speeding the vaccine to the market will not compromise its safety.
WHO has recommended the first recipients of the vaccine be health care workers, perhaps followed by pregnant women and people with underlying health problems.
Kieny said WHO expects to see reports of side effects once the vaccine is given to millions of people, but that deadly side effects will be rare. Vaccines commonly provoke reactions such as nausea, fever, pain from the injection and diarrhea.
She said the agency would work with country officials to detect any sign the vaccine might cause more worrying side effects, like Guillain Barre syndrome, a temporary paralysis disorder reported by hundreds of people after America’s disastrous 1976 immunization campaign against another variant of swine flu.
To fight the current pandemic , or global outbreak, half a dozen major pharmaceutical companies located in the United States, Europe and Australia are developing their own swine flu vaccines, which will have to be approved by drug regulatory authorities in each country where they are used.
It is the first time that companies have rushed to produce a vaccine within months to fight a flu pandemic. Health officials expect swine flu to surge in the fall, with the return of the regular flu season.
On Wednesday, Swiss drug maker Novartis said it had begun testing its swine flu vaccine in Europe, and would begin selling it long before completing its safety tests next year.
Last month, Australian pharmaceutical CSL started trials on its vaccine candidate.
Kieny said ongoing tests in Australia, China, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States should inform officials how many doses of the vaccine are required. Many experts think people will need two shots to be protected.
Europe and the US both have fast-track approval systems to make the swine flu vaccine available before extensive safety tests are completed.
In a statement on its website, WHO said Thursday “the public needs to be reassured” that procedures for approving swine flu vaccines “are rigorous and do not compromise safety or quality controls.”
To increase the global supply of swine flu vaccines, WHO recommends that countries use ones containing adjuvants, a component that stretches the vaccine’s active ingredient and boosts the body’s immune response. Adjuvants are commonly used in flu vaccines in Europe, but there are no licensed flu vaccines with adjuvants in the US. There is little or no information on how safe flu vaccines with adjuvants are in pregnant women and children — two of the groups most at risk in the pandemic.
Meanwhile, a US report issued Thursday said commercially available tests for influenza often fail to detect the swine flu virus, which could mean some patients will go without treatment.
So-called rapid influenza diagnostic tests (RIDTs), which can return a result within 15 minutes, are especially prone to missing A(H1N1) virus infections when the amount of virus in a specimen is low, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said.
“Although the RIDTs were capable of detecting novel A(H1N1) virus from respiratory specimens containing high levels of virus, the overall sensitivity was low among all specimens tested and declined substantially as virus levels decreased,” the CDC said in its weekly morbidity and mortality report. “A negative result does not rule out infection with novel influenza A(H1N1) virus,” it warned.
