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						Trial data suggest new 
						typhoid shot could halve infection rate 
			
   
            
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		[September 29, 2017] By 
		Kate Kelland 
			
		LONDON (Reuters) - A new typhoid vaccine 
		developed by privately-held Bharat Biotech proved safe and highly 
		immunogenic in a study and could be used to prevent millions of 
		infections if it succeeds in final-stage clinical trials, researchers 
		said on Friday. 
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			 Typhoid fever affects between 12 and 20 million people worldwide in 
			regions where the quality of water and sanitation is low, 
			particularly in south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. 
			 
			Around 1 in 100 cases is deadly, and about 3 percent of those 
			infected become chronic carriers of the disease. 
			 
			Results of a mid-stage trial of the vaccine, a so-called 
			Vi-conjugate shot which, its developers say, could also be used 
			safely in babies, showed it was able to prevent half of those 
			vaccinated from developing typhoid when they were exposed to it. 
			
			  
			"Our study provides further evidence to support the development of 
			Vi-conjugate vaccines as a control measure to reduce the burden of 
			typhoid fever," said Andrew Pollard of Oxford University's vaccine 
			group, who co-led the trial. 
			 
			Typhoid is caused by a bacteria called Salmonella enterica serovar 
			Typhi and is usually treated with antibiotics. But access to 
			antibiotics is in poorer regions is sometimes limited, and the bug's 
			resistance to them is on the rise. 
			 
			Experts say that while children are particularly susceptible to 
			typhoid, no vaccine has yet been licensed for worldwide use in 
			babies under 24 months old. 
			 
			This study, published in The Lancet medical journal, was conducted 
			in 112 adult volunteers and used a "controlled human infection 
			model". Volunteers are randomly assigned to be given either the 
			experimental vaccine or a control one, and then deliberately exposed 
			to the pathogen. Participants are closely monitored and treated for 
			infection afterwards. 
			
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			Studies like this have been used in the development of various 
			vaccines, including shots against cholera, since they are a fast and 
			clear way to assess whether a vaccine works. 
			 
			Nicholas Feasted, an expert at the Liverpool School of Tropical 
			Medicine in Britain, and Myron Levine of the University of Maryland 
			in the United States, said in The Lancet that the trial's results 
			had been "awaited with much anticipation" by global health experts 
			keen to tackle typhoid in endemic areas. 
			 
			The World Health Organization's expert panel on vaccines is due next 
			month to consider whether to recommend Vi-conjugate vaccines to 
			prevent typhoid. Once the WHO's recommendations have been made, the 
			Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation, which helps fund 
			vaccines at lower prices for poor countries, will decide whether or 
			not it can finance the shots. 
			 
			(Editing by Robin Pomeroy) 
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