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To: ayn rand who wrote (19887)9/29/2009 3:18:49 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 103300
 
UPDATE 1-UK teenager 'unlikely' to have died from vaccine

Tue Sep 29, 2009 2:37pm EDT
reuters.com


* Post-mortem under way to determine cause of death
* Batch of vaccine involved recalled by maker
* (Adds Glaxo statement, U.S. decision)

By Matthew Jones

LONDON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline's (GSK.L)
cervical cancer vaccine Cervarix probably did not cause the
death of a British teenager shortly after she was given the
drug, a health official said on Tuesday.

"I think it is unlikely that will be the case ... I think
once we get into the investigation ... we may discover there is
another cause of her death," Dr Caron Grainger, joint director
of public health in the area where the 14-year-old girl died,
said in an interview with the BBC.

GSK said in a statement that it had voluntarily recalled
the batch of vaccine that was used, pending the result of an
investigation.

"At this stage the cause of this tragic death is unknown,"
the company said.

Police are treating the girl's death as "unexplained" and
said a post-mortem was taking place on Tuesday.

The teenager, named by a police source as Natalie Morton,
fell ill on Monday after being vaccinated at her school under a
national immunisation programme against the sexually
transmitted human papilloma virus (HPV).

A small number of other girls at the Blue Coat Church of
England School reported suffering from dizziness and nausea but
were not admitted to hospital, health officials said.

"The message for parents at this moment in time and for
young girls receiving this vaccine is that you should go ahead
with the vaccination," said Grainger, who works for the
National Health Service in the central English city of
Coventry.

News of the death came shortly before U.S. health
regulators shelved a bid by Glaxo to sell Cervarix in the
United States. [ID:nN29150932]

NO PLANS TO HALT PROGRAM

Britain's Department of Health said there were no plans to
halt the programme under which more than 1.4 million doses of
Cervarix have been administered.

"The vaccine has a strong safety record so precautionary
measures are focused on the batch," it said in a statement.

Grainger said only about 2,000 people had suffered any
adverse reactions to the immunisation programme and that these
were mostly minor. GlaxoSmithKline said on Monday it was
working with regulators to understand the case better.

Sudden teenage deaths, in general, are not unknown.
"Unfortunately, some young people do die suddenly for a variety
of reasons, including cardiac causes. Sometimes they have been
entirely well before their death," said Dr David Elliman of
London's Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children.

The drug is given in three shots over six months.

The programme to vaccinate girls aged 12 to 13 began in
September 2008. Cervical cancer is the 12th most common women's
cancer in Britain, killing more than 1,000 women each year.

Should Cervarix gain U.S. approval it would compete with
Merck & Co's (MRK.N) Gardasil, which has been on the U.S.
market since 2006 and had sales of $268 million in the second
quarter.

GlaxoSmithKline won support for its cervical cancer vaccine
from an advisory panel to Japan's Health Ministry on Tuesday,
putting it on track to be the first company to offer such a
vaccine in the world's second-biggest drug market.
[ID:nT327756]
(Editing by David Stamp and Matthew Lewis)

Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved