Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

US CDC starts trial testing efficacy of Canadian Ebola vaccine in Sierra Leone

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 09:11 PM
    TORONTO — A third large-scale trial testing the made-in-Canada Ebola vaccine has begun in West Africa.
     
    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control says it has started a clinical trial in Sierra Leone that will eventually vaccinate 6,000 front-line workers in the fight against the disease.
     
    They include doctors, nurses, treatment centre cleaners, ambulance drivers and teams that bury the bodies of people who have died from Ebola.
     
    The vaccine was designed by scientists at Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg and is being developed by a biotech company called NewLink Genetics in partnership with pharmaceutical giant Merck.
     
    The spread of Ebola has declined markedly in Sierra Leone, with only nine new cases reported in the week that ended April 5 — the most recent period for which figures are available.
     
    That may make it difficult for this trial to show whether the vaccine works; if few or no people in an area are contracting Ebola, it's impossible to show that a vaccine is protective.
     
    A large U.S.-funded vaccine trial in Liberia is being stymied by the same issue. The parties responsible for that trial — the National Institutes of Health and the Liberian government — are hoping to persuade the government of Guinea to allow the trial to move into that country. Guinea currently has the highest new case count of the affected countries. 
     
    Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of the CDC's national centre for immunization and respiratory diseases, says the design of the Sierra Leone trial has been adapted to try to increase the chances that it will be able to determine whether the vaccine works.
     
    The initial design would have seen people in the study vaccinated in groups, with some randomly selected to get vaccine immediately and others offered vaccine after a delay. If the vaccine works you would expect to see fewer infections in the group that got vaccine early.
     
    Schuchat says the plan now is to randomly assign individuals to get vaccine immediately or after a six-month delay. That will give the scientists running the trial more time to assess if the vaccine works, she says.
     
    If the vaccine is 50 per cent effective — in other words, if it prevents infection in half the people who receive it — that should become clear if 67 people in the trial go on to be infected with Ebola, Schuchat says.
     
    But if, as is hoped, the vaccine is more potent, a conclusion could be arrived at sooner. If the vaccine is 90 per cent effective, then that would become apparent if 17 people in the study became infected, Schuchat says.
     
    In the week ending April 5 there were no new infections among health workers and in the week prior there was only one in Sierra Leone, according to updates from the World Health Organization. Since the outbreak began, 861 health workers have been infected and 495 have died.
     
    Schuchat notes, though, that the outbreak isn't over yet.
     
     "We're thrilled that the disease counts are way down, but people are continuing to get Ebola virus disease," she says.
     
    "And we know that some of the Ebola outbreaks in the past ... haven't just been snuffed out, but they've taken quite a while to really end. And we know that health workers are going to be under continued risk during that period."
     
    The CDC trial is also being financed by the U.S. government, with help from the CDC Foundation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Frets He Wasn't Smart Enough To Carry Out Mission: Trial

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Frets He Wasn't Smart Enough To Carry Out Mission: Trial
    John Nuttall was recorded on hidden camera telling an undercover officer he had no doubts about going through with a terrorist attack, but he questioned his own intelligence and abilities.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Frets He Wasn't Smart Enough To Carry Out Mission: Trial

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial
    VANCOUVER — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he won't be called to testify at the Mike Duffy trial.

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days
    TORONTO — A Toronto man accused of holding a woman captive for five days and subjecting her to sexual assaults that included "ritualistic actions" has been charged with multiple offences.

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River
    The man is believed to have fallen into the Nautley River near the community of Fort Fraser, west of Vanderhoof, at about 12:30 p.m. on Easter Sunday.

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors
    OTTAWA — The Harper government unloaded its multibillion-dollar stake in General Motors on Monday, tapping into a stockpile of cash that could help it overcome the oil slump and fulfil its key promise to balance the election-year budget.

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope
    VANCOUVER — Canadian companies will play a significant role in constructing what's billed as the most powerful optical telescope on Earth.

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope