Scientists Agonized Over Flu Vaccine
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Dec. 15, 2003
Late last winter, a committee of vaccine experts designing this
season's flu shot considered their choices. They had two, and both
seemed bad.
Should they stick with last year's formula, even though a new
strain of the bug was ominously building strength? Or should they
try to make a new vaccine and risk complications or delays that
could result in a shortage or maybe even no vaccine at all?
In the end, the committee voted 17-1 to bring back last year's
version, even though they feared they were telling millions of
Americans to roll up their sleeves for shots that might not work
very well.
Many of them probably agreed with Dr. Theodore Eickhoff of the
University of Colorado, who said: "For the first time in many
years of participating in these deliberations, I must add I am very
uncomfortable with the recommendation."
What Eickhoff and the others dreaded is exactly what happened.
That new strain of flu became the dominant variety, accounting for
three-quarters of all cases as the disease got an unusually early
start this fall.
About 83 million doses of vaccine were made, but no one really
knows how much protection from illness it gives. It almost
certainly will not be the usual 70 percent to 90 percent, and some
experts fear it is below 50 percent.
"We agonized. We asked repeatedly 'Is there another choice?"'
remembered Dr. David Stephens, who chaired the panel and heads
infectious diseases at Emory University. "The bottom line is, we
weren't really given a choice."
Their experience shows the frustrating and often imprecise
nature of humanity's labor to stay ahead of this perennial nuisance
and sometime killer.
The flu virus mutates constantly. The Food and Drug
Administration, with the help of its expert committee, must decide
in late winter what varieties will be the biggest threats. Picking
the best combination is a mixture of science, luck and
seat-of-the-pants instinct.
"By the time you know what's the right strain, you can't do
anything about it," said Dr. Michael Decker, head of scientific
affairs at Aventis, one of the three U.S. vaccine makers.
The first inkling of something worrisome dawned on flu experts
at the end of January. Just two weeks before committees were
scheduled to meet at the World Health Organization in Geneva and
the FDA in Rockville, Md., to settle on the makeup of this fall's
vaccine, scientists who track the flu noticed a new strain was
gathering mass.
The vaccine could theoretically protect against several strains
of the virus, but because production is slow, the shot is limited
to just three. Any of these flu bugs can make people very sick, but
since it emerged in 1968 the one most likely to result in pneumonia
or death is a type called H3N2.
Flu viruses are categorized according to the makeup of their two
key proteins, hemagglutinin and neuraminidase, the "H" and "N"
in their names. Changes in the virus' hemagglutinin is especially
troublesome, since this is the protein the human body aims for when
it makes antibodies to fight off the flu.
For five years, the vaccine had protected against an H3N2 strain
called Panama. Now that virus had mutated. A version with two
differences in its hemagglutinin was causing outbreaks in Asia and
had also turned up in Europe and North America.
The FDA's committee met in February and heard the bad news: The
current vaccine might not reliably keep people from catching this
emerging strain, called Fujian.
Nobody knew if the new strain would die out or gain strength,
but Dr. Roland Levandowski, the FDA's flu vaccine expert, warned
that new flu variants sometimes spread rapidly.
The WHO - which makes vaccine recommendations to countries which
set their own vaccine standards - had already postponed its
decision on H3N2. The FDA committee did the same.
When the FDA committee met again in March, the situation was, in
some ways, even worse. Ten 10 percent to 20 percent of H3N2 viruses
around the world were Fujian. But the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention was having trouble isolating a sample that could be
the basis of a vaccine.
"This is a very urgent issue," CDC flu chief Nancy Cox told
the committee. "We've been working on this very intensively for
what seems like a very long time. We're very disappointed."
Still ahead were many other steps, as well. The Fujian strain's
hemagglutinin and neuraminidase genes would have to be transferred
into tame flu viruses that grow nicely in hens' eggs so vaccine
makers could produce them in bulk. Even then, it would take weeks
to know if the process would reliably generate the vast quantities
needed.
"It became, Do we go with a vaccine we know will be partially
effective?" remembered Eickhoff. "Or do we wait around and try to
identify a possible candidate strain?"
When the vote came, only Peter Palese, head of microbiology at
Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, chose to switch to the
Fujian strain despite the unknowns. He worried that an ineffective
formula would give the flu vaccine a bad name because many people
might get sick.
The WHO made the same decision as the FDA. In hindsight, was it
correct?
Decker recalled what happened in 2000. Delays resulting from a
switch to a new strain, along with a virus that produced poorly,
contributed to a vaccine shortage.
A last-minute change to Fujian this year "could easily have
meant not only a severe shortage but also the wrong vaccine," he
said. "Right now, people are saying, 'You idiot, why didn't you
choose Fujian?' But what if Fujian had petered out?"
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