WHO announces revised procedure that would speed
vaccine development in the event of a pandemic influenza
Send a link to a friend
Reverse genetic viruses would be made available to
labs earlier
[February 27, 2007]
Vaccines
are a critical intervention for preventing influenza and reducing
its health consequences during a pandemic. Since 2004, WHO has been
working with various partners to find ways to improve and promote
the development and production of pandemic vaccines in order to make
such vaccines available rapidly and in as large a quantity as
possible.
|
As part of this activity, WHO, in collaboration with the World
Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), has been exploring how to
expedite the availability of a pandemic influenza vaccine by making
pandemic vaccine viruses, required for the production of pandemic
influenza vaccines, available to vaccine producers earlier than is
currently the practice. Following an analysis of biosafety risks,
WHO and OIE have agreed that if the pandemic preparedness alert
phase reaches level 4 or above, pandemic influenza vaccine viruses
that have been developed using reverse genetics by WHO Collaborating
Centres can be made available to vaccine manufacturers prior to the
completion of all subsequent in vivo safety tests, including chicken
and ferret tests.
It is anticipated that this accelerated procedure will reduce the
time required to develop pandemic vaccines by approximately 14 days.
The revised procedure described above will be implemented only on
the following conditions:
1. that WHO pandemic
preparedness level is at phase 4 or above;
2. that any vaccine
virus released to vaccine manufacturers prior to the completion
of all in vivo safety tests will be classified as an infectious
substance according to the International Air Transport
Association (IATA) agreed definitions1 and will remain so until
WHO announces that all relevant tests have been completed by the
WHO Collaborating Centre; and
[to top of second column]
|
3.
that the receipt of any virus classified as an infectious substance
will be subject to compliance with:
-
All national import
and export regulations concerning IATA classified infectious
substances;
-
All relevant IATA
regulations on shipping infectious substances;
-
All national
biosafety guidance in dealing with infectious substances.
WHO will announce the availability from a WHO Collaborating
Centre of any reverse genetic pandemic vaccine virus for vaccine
development and will also announce the completion of subsequent in
vivo safety tests. Member States wishing to receive such vaccine
viruses are encouraged to make the necessary arrangements in advance
with customs authorities, courier companies, national regulatory
agencies and all other relevant national authorities.
1http://www.iata.org/whatwedo/cargo/
dangerous_goods/infectious_substances.htm
[Text copied from
World Health Organization news release]
|