Two new vaccines against bird flu effective in Dutch lab -govt
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[March 18, 2023]
AMSTERDAM/PARIS (Reuters) -Two vaccines tested by a Dutch
veterinary research centre have proved effective against highly
infectious bird flu in a first experiment conducted under a controlled
environment, the Dutch government said on Friday.
"Not only did the vaccines give poultry used in the lab protection
against disease symptoms but they also countered the spreading of the
bird flu," the government said in a statement.
One vaccine was produced by France's Ceva Animal Health and the other by
Germany's Boehringer Ingelheim, an official document on the Dutch
government website showed.
Avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, has been spreading around the
world in the past year, killing more than 200 million birds - and six
million in the Netherlands alone - sending egg prices rocketing and
raising concern among governments about human transmission.
Some countries including China already vaccinate against bird flu and as
the virus seems to have become endemic some other governments around the
world that have opposed vaccines are reconsidering. Their opposition
centred on fears a vaccine could mask the spread of bird flu but tests
indicate it would not be the case with the two vaccines tested in the
Netherlands.
As part of a European programme, the Netherlands has been testing bird
flu vaccines for egg-laying hens while France is carrying out tests on
ducks, Italy on turkeys and Hungary on Pekin ducks.
Most of these tests are based on existing vaccines and adapted to the
particular H5N1 strain that has been spreading in Europe.
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Ducks in cages are seen at a duck farm
in Nafferton, northern England November 17, 2014 after Britain took
action to contain bird flu. REUTERS/Phil Noble/
The Wageningen Bioveterinary
Research, located northeast of Amsterdam, had carried out tests on
four chicken vaccines before selecting those of Ceva Animal Health
and Boehringer Ingelheim. The other two vaccines that were tested
were produced by Bulgaria's Huvepharma and Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD)
respectively, the official document showed.
"I'm happy that we have two vaccines with which we can take the
vaccination process against bird flu forward. I'm putting in the
next steps as quickly as possible but in a responsible way (...),"
Dutch Minister of Agriculture Piet Adema said in the statement.
A field trial will be launched to see whether the vaccines that work
in a laboratory setting are also effective if applied in wider
conditions.
The trial should take more than a year to give an idea of how long
chickens are still immune after vaccination, Adema said in a letter
to the President of the House of Representatives dated Friday, also
available on the government website.
(Reporting by Sybille de La Hamaide and Benoit Van Overstraeten;
Editing by Susan Fenton)
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