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Biotech / Medical : Bioterrorism -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: nigel bates who wrote (542)3/25/2002 12:03:20 PM
From: Jibacoa  Respond to of 891
 
CLHB It has now more than doubled since my previous comment back in November,<g>:

Message 16591810

siliconinvestor.com

RAGL

Bernard



To: nigel bates who wrote (542)3/29/2002 1:29:49 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 891
 
NYT -- Smallpox Vaccine Stockpile Is Larger Than Was Thought

March 29, 2002

Smallpox Vaccine Stockpile Is Larger Than Was Thought

By GINA KOLATA and LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN

Federal officials said yesterday that they might
now have access to much more smallpox
vaccine than had been thought, a finding that
many said changed their options in responding to a
terrorist attack with smallpox.

The 15.4 million doses in a government stockpile can
be diluted with confidence fivefold without losing
potency. In addition, a drug company, Aventis
Pasteur, said it had more than 85 million doses of
vaccine, which has been stored, frozen, for decades.
An official of the company said in an interview that
tests showed that the vaccine was still effective.
Other tests are under way to see if it too can be
stretched to cover more people. [Page A19.]

The existence of the Aventis stockpile was reported yesterday in The Washington Post.

Most health officials are not advocating resumption of mass vaccination against smallpox, because the vaccine itself
can kill and cause injuries, including brain damage. But the disclosure that vaccine supplies are more abundant than
had been thought is likely to reignite the debate about how the government should prepare for what most consider
the remote possibility of a terrorist attack involving smallpox.

Richard J. Markham, chief executive for the American operations of Aventis Pharma, the parent company of
Aventis Pasteur, said in an interview yesterday that the company had told the Department of Health and Human
Services about its vaccine stockpile years ago but that the government had shown little interest until after the
terrorist attacks last fall. Federal officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the government began
negotiations with the company about the stockpile in October but did not disclose its existence because of national
security concerns, legal issues and questions about whether the vaccine was effective.

In a news conference conducted by telephone yesterday, Tommy G. Thompson,
the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, deflected
questions about the Aventis vaccine and the negotiations with the company. Mr.
Thompson said he would provide more information today, but added, "We expect
this to turn out to be more good news."

Routine vaccination against smallpox, a highly infectious viral disease that killed
about a third of those who contracted it, was abandoned in the United States in
1972 and the disease was declared eradicated from the world in 1980. The only
two official stocks of the virus are held by Russia and the United States. But
many experts on terrorism say it is possible that stocks of the virus may exist in
other hands.

Because much of the world's population has not been vaccinated against the
disease and because the immunity from vaccination is believed to wane, the
release of the smallpox virus could be catastrophic.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced months ago that if an
outbreak occurred it would isolate infected people and vaccinate those who had
come in contact with them. This tactic, ring vaccination, was used by the centers
and the World Health Organization to eradicate the disease. The smallpox vaccine
is expected to protect people if it is given in the first four days after they are
exposed to the virus.

But some medical experts call for a national dialogue on the best way to prepare
for a possible smallpox outbreak that was spread by terrorists.

In an editorial in a forthcoming issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, made public yesterday, Dr. Anthony
Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said there was "considerable
skepticism" about the C.D.C.'s plan, despite what he called the soundness of its approach and its success in the
past.

"I would like to hear it debated," Dr. Fauci said in an interview, perhaps in Congressional hearings or even in
televised town meetings.

"A decision about what your approach is going to be should be done in a way that the American public can
understand why those decisions are going to be made," he said.

"You want to have that kind of discussion in the absence of the horror that accompanies an ongoing attack," Dr.
Fauci said.

In the same issue of the medical journal, which released the articles early citing the widespread interest in smallpox,
Dr. William J. Bicknell of Boston University School of Public Health, criticized the ring vaccination approach, saying
it is based on optimistic assumptions about how fast the virus would spread and how the public would respond.

"An epidemic is highly likely to outrun the vaccinators," Dr. Bicknell wrote. "Effective enforcement of quarantine is
also difficult. Official reassurances followed by further uncontrolled outbreaks could provoke panic, flouting of
authority and even the breakdown of medical and public health services."

But even critics of the disease control agency's plan are not necessarily advocating a return to mass vaccinations.
The chances of a smallpox attack are generally deemed to be low, and the vaccine can have severe, even lethal, side
effects.

While these reactions are rare — one to two out of every million people vaccinated die and a few hundred out of
every million have severe reactions, a number that is high enough to cause health experts to question the wisdom of
mass vaccinations.

"If there were absolutely no toxicity whatsoever to the smallpox vaccine, there would be very little debate," Dr.
Fauci said at a news conference on yesterday. "We could eliminate the threat of a smallpox bioterrorism attack."

Writing for the April 25 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Fauci, Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, the
journal's editor, and Dr. Bicknell urge the public to consider agonizing choices: Voluntarily immunize everyone with
a vaccine that could kill about 200 Americans, leave some alive but brain damaged, and disfigure others with deep
and permanent scars. Or save the vaccine for an attack and use ring vaccination and assume it would contain the
epidemic.

Some experts, like Dr. Jonathan B. Tucker, author of "Scourge: The Once and Future threat of Smallpox" (Atlantic
Monthly Press, 2001), said they would like to see more information on how real the bioterrorist threat was.

Dr. John Modlin, who heads a committee of experts that advises the disease control agency on immunization, said
the group was considering who should have access to the vaccine and expected to discuss the issue and possibly
make recommendations at a meeting in June.

Dr. Modlin said he expected that his group would not recommend vaccinating everyone because the vaccine was so
risky. The most difficult question, he said, was deciding if some people should be offered the vaccine because they
would help in an emergency.

"In some parts of the country state and local health officials feel strongly that their first responders should be
immunized," Dr. Modlin said. "At the federal level, officials want to keep those numbers small."

It would be difficult to identify those who should be vaccinated, he said, adding: "The more we immunize, the more
we increase the likelihood of adverse events. If we immunize tens or hundreds of thousands there will be serious
adverse events, possibly even deaths. The question is whether that is good public health policy." The C.D.C. usually
accepts the committee's recommendations but in this case, Dr. Modlin said, the final decision might be made by Mr.
Thompson or President Bush.

Dr. Jeffrey Hunker, a national security expert who is dean of the Heinz School of Public Policy and Management at
Carnegie Mellon University, said he did not envy the person who had to make the final decision about the smallpox
vaccine.

"It may in fact be our best choice to vaccinate everybody, but the fact is that you are literally going to have poster
children who are dying from the vaccination," Dr. Hunter said. "This presents one of the most difficult public policy
choices anyone is ever going to have to face."

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company



To: nigel bates who wrote (542)3/29/2002 1:32:06 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 891
 
NYT -- Officials See No Grounds for Mass Smallpox Effort

March 29, 2002

THE VACCINE

Officials See No Grounds for Mass Smallpox Effort

By DENISE GRADY

Even with more abundant supplies of smallpox
vaccine expected by the end of the year, health
officials said yesterday that they still would not
recommend mass vaccination to prepare for a possible
terrorist attack. But they left themselves plenty of
room to change course, saying repeatedly that the
issue was still open for public discussion.

The vaccine has significant risks and the likelihood of
terrorists' using smallpox is considered low, Tommy
G. Thompson, the secretary of health and human
services, and Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the head of the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
said at a news conference.

If a smallpox attack does occur, Mr. Thompson said, current plans call for vaccinating only people exposed to the
disease and others in contact with them. That strategy, called "ring containment," was recommended in November
by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dr. Fauci said that ring containment was a proven method of halting smallpox epidemics, and that it was preferable
to widespread vaccination because the smallpox vaccine could have serious side effects. For every million people
vaccinated, one or two have reactions that can be fatal, most often encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain.
Hundreds more may have other reactions that are not life-threatening but are serious nonetheless, he said.

Although most healthy people tolerate the smallpox vaccine well, except for
developing a sore at the vaccination site, some get fevers, headaches or extensive
rashes. In a recent study of the vaccine in 680 adults, more than a third had
reactions that caused them to miss work, school or recreational activities, or to
lose sleep. Other vaccines now used to prevent common diseases are much safer,
Dr. Fauci said.

"If there was absolutely no toxicity to the smallpox vaccine, there would be very
little debate about having people vaccinated, because you could essentially
eliminate the threat," Dr. Fauci said. "That, unfortunately, is not the case."

People with lowered immunity can become very sick from the smallpox vaccine,
which is made from vaccinia, a virus related to the one that causes smallpox. If a
person's immune system is not working properly, the virus can multiply
explosively and cause a severe infection. People at risk include those with AIDS
or H.I.V., cancer and autoimmune diseases, and those with organ transplants or
health problems that require them to take steroids or other drugs that suppress the
immune system.

People with chronic skin conditions that cause raw patches of skin, like eczema,
even if they occurred in the past, may also develop severe problems from the
smallpox vaccine, said Dr. Robert B. Belshe, a professor of medicine at Saint
Louis University who conducted a recent study of the vaccine.

Dr. Fauci and Dr. Belshe said that if the vaccine became available to those who wanted it in the absence of an
attack, people with lowered immunity or skin disorders should avoid it. Very vulnerable people with immune
disorders may even be at risk if they are around others who were recently vaccinated, though Dr. Belshe said that
problem might be solved by covering the vaccination sites with special bandages that prevent the virus from spilling
out into the environment.

But if people with compromised immune systems were exposed to a smallpox patient during an outbreak, the
risk-benefit picture would change, and, Dr. Fauci said, they could be vaccinated and then given injections of
vaccinia immune globulin, which can prevent severe reactions. The substance can also be used to treat extreme
reactions in healthy people.

Vaccinia immune globulin is in short supply now, but, Mr. Thompson said, the government has set aside $100
million to make more.

Dr. Fauci said the government's long-term goal was to make a smallpox vaccine "that induces strong immunity but
does not replicate enough to pose a threat to immunocompromised people."

Dr. Fauci was asked whether he would take the current vaccine himself or give it to his family if it were to become
widely available. He declined to answer, saying that although he is normally quite open about his opinions, in this
case he feared that his taking a stand "would put a big damper on open discussion."

Mr. Thompson said that companies making the vaccine are not free to sell it. Smallpox vaccine is not licensed now
and the government owns all or most of the existing stocks. It has contracted with a biotechnology company,
Acambis, to provide 54 million doses of a reconfigured vaccine by this summer.

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company



To: nigel bates who wrote (542)3/29/2002 1:36:42 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 891
 
NYT -- Officials Try to Soothe and Inform in Meeting on Anthrax Cleanup at Postal Building

March 29, 2002

CONTAMINATED MAIL

Officials Try to Soothe and Inform
in Meeting on Anthrax Cleanup at
Postal Building

By FRANCIS X. CLINES

WASHINGTON, March 28 — Hundreds of
worried postal workers and neighbors of the
anthrax-ridden Brentwood mail sorting center
are voicing fears about the coming effort to
decontaminate the sprawling building with tons of
chlorine dioxide gas.

"Most of us do not trust what they tell us," a postal
worker angrily declared at a packed public information
meeting on Wednesday night, drawing loud applause
from a crowd still anxious over the anthrax deaths of
two Brentwood workers and the illness of two others
who handled terrorist mail laced with the highly lethal
toxin last fall.

"Nobody is going to be left hanging out there with poison in their community," Ivan C. A. Weeks, the District of
Columbia health commissioner, promised the crowd of more than 700 packing Patmos Baptist Church near the
contaminated mail center, which was sealed shut Oct. 21.

Throughout a three-hour meeting, many reassurances were offered but not immediately accepted as specialists
described elaborate plans for a biohazard remediation project that will be 175 times more extensive than the lengthy
cleansing of anthrax required at the Hart Senate Office Building.

The gassing of the anthrax inside the center may begin in the next two months, providing critical health and
logistical details can be agreed upon, officials said. At least 20 tons of the greenish chlorine dioxide gas will be used,
created on-site from separate ingredients in the interests of safety, and then sucked out for disposal through a
special sealed filtration system, the planners say.

"Tear it down," demanded one fearful resident of the Brentwood neighborhood,
urging an option that officials say would likely spread anthrax-laden dust across
the city.

Thomas G. Day, the Postal Service's vice president for engineering, told skeptical
residents and workers, "To protect everyone we are literally sealing up the
building and every nook and cranny we can find."

Questioners voiced skepticism that the building, which was the workplace for
2,000 people, could ever be made safe again. Residents expressed repeated
concern that the toxic chlorine dioxide gas required for the decontamination
would leak into the neighborhood.

They asked how, when and where would the gas ingredients be trucked through
the neighborhood? How would they know the building was truly safe? Would the
standards for Brentwood, a working-class black neighborhood, be as rigid as
those for the Hart building, one of the power centers of Capitol Hill politics?

"You don't think we come first? We work in that building!" a postal worker
declared in complaining that those most immediately involved in the anthrax scare
at Brentwood have received little information on what is to come.

Mr. Day and other federal and district officials repeatedly emphasized that the "monumental" $35 million cleansing
plan would not be implemented until each detail was agreed upon and explained to the public. "Zero tolerance" of all
anthrax, they vowed, would be the sole standard before the building and its tens of thousands of pieces of
machinery might ever be reactivated.

"If there is any doubt, then we won't leave the machines there and we won't open the building," Mr. Day promised.

Theodore J. Gordon, the district's deputy director of public health, emphasized that the anthrax-killing gas would be
pumped throughout the thoroughly taped and plugged premises, with 3,000 sensitive "spore strips" monitoring the
results inside.

"Our kill ratio is 100 percent," Mr. Gordon declared. "If we don't get 100 percent, we're going to go back to clean it
until we do."

Officials did not minimize the task they face, noting that the Hart Building had less than 100,000 cubic feet of space
to be cleaned, while the Brentwood center had 17.5 million cubic feet plus intricate machinery that can be tested
only by remote control during decontamination. The Environmental Protection Agency initially proposed to use
chlorine dioxide gas throughout the Hart Building, which has about one million square feet of floor space and a large
atrium, but ultimately concentrated only on the two offices where the anthrax exposure occurred as well as the
ventilation system.

"We have learned a great deal from the Hart building," Mr. Day said of the methods planned for Brentwood, which
he called "a much bigger task." In one lesson learned, special humidifiers will be installed to keep the chlorine
dioxide highly humid for the 12-hour period at 75 degrees Fahrenheit, which is considered best for killing the
anthrax.

The Brentwood center handled two toxin-laden letters discovered at the Hart building last fall as a wave of anthrax
terrorism shook the nation. Three other people were killed and mail contamination was tracked as well to the sorting
center in Trenton, N.J., which is to undergo a treatment similar to the plans for Brentwood.

No problems with leaking gas were reported during the Hart cleanup, said officials who estimated the gas would
safely dissipate and cause temporary mucous irritation, at worst. People scoffed at such reassurances, noting the
many unknowns produced thus far during the anthrax threat.

One Brentwood area resident said she had proper respect and gratitude for all the scientists and public health
officials working so hard. "But we need to admit there is a lot of I-don't-know here; we need to know that you don't
know," she added, pleading for candor through the difficult process to come.

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company