WHO
sees Zika link proven in weeks as U.S., India lead
vaccine race
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[February 12, 2016]
GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health
Organization (WHO) expects suspected links between the Zika virus and
two neurological disorders, microcephaly in babies and Guillain-Barre
syndrome, to be confirmed within weeks, a top official said on Friday.
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A sharp increase in birth defects in Brazil has triggered a global
health emergency over the mosquito-borne virus and spurred a race to
develop a vaccine and better diagnostic tests.
"We have a few more weeks to be sure to demonstrate causality, but
the link between Zika and Guillain-Barre is highly probable," Marie-Paule
Kieny, WHO Assistant Director-General for Health Systems and
Innovation, told a news briefing.
Kieny said U.S. government scientists and an Indian biotechnology
company were currently frontrunners in vaccine development, although
it would take at least 18 months to start large-scale clinical
trials of candidate shots.
"Two vaccine candidates seem to be more advanced: a DNA vaccine from
the U.S. National Institutes for Health and an inactivated product
from Bharat Biotech in India," she said.
The NIH is working on a DNA-based vaccine that uses the same
approach as one being developed for West Nile virus. India's Bharat
said last week that its experimental vaccine would start
pre-clinical trials in animals imminently.
Overall, around 15 groups are working on Zika vaccines, including
France's Sanofi <SASY.PA>, as well as researchers in Brazil, who
announced a new partnership with the University of Texas on
Thursday.
The road to developing a preventative shot against the disease is
strewn with hurdles, however, not least because the group viewed as
most at risk are pregnant women.
Improved diagnostic tests are also viewed as critical to fighting
the disease, which is now sweeping through the Americas, and Kieny
said new test kits were being rapidly developed and could be
available in weeks.
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Researchers in Brazil are scrambling to determine whether Zika has
caused a major rise in microcephaly, or abnormally small heads in
newborns, with more than 4,000 suspected cases of the condition
reported to date. Brazil has confirmed more than 400 of those cases
as microcephaly and has identified the presence of Zika in 17
babies, but a link has yet to be proven.
Still, many scientists are convinced that the link is real and new
evidence of Zika in the brain of an aborted fetus, reported on
Wednesday, has added to the case.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay and Ben Hirschler; Editing by Kevin
Liffey and Gareth Jones)
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