The Prague Post - Ebola trial vaccines heading to Uganda: WHO

EUR -
AED 4.258314
AFN 80.58869
ALL 97.341206
AMD 444.98716
ANG 2.075182
AOA 1063.274903
ARS 1500.373165
AUD 1.778666
AWG 2.090025
AZN 1.972673
BAM 1.946265
BBD 2.342404
BDT 142.120501
BGN 1.955748
BHD 0.4371
BIF 3411.871711
BMD 1.159515
BND 1.490415
BOB 8.044826
BRL 6.479946
BSD 1.160132
BTN 100.481381
BWP 15.637907
BYN 3.796324
BYR 22726.486163
BZD 2.330214
CAD 1.592999
CDF 3349.837615
CHF 0.931502
CLF 0.028347
CLP 1112.044011
CNY 8.322822
CNH 8.328092
COP 4841.367691
CRC 585.978785
CUC 1.159515
CUP 30.727137
CVE 109.168254
CZK 24.597594
DJF 206.069299
DKK 7.463111
DOP 70.44032
DZD 150.607948
EGP 56.575959
ERN 17.392719
ETB 159.780873
FJD 2.612737
FKP 0.858021
GBP 0.868095
GEL 3.13824
GGP 0.858021
GHS 12.117138
GIP 0.858021
GMD 83.485555
GNF 10036.758052
GTQ 8.903614
GYD 242.698011
HKD 9.101303
HNL 30.553069
HRK 7.534535
HTG 151.765384
HUF 397.487379
IDR 19024.156045
ILS 3.889731
IMP 0.858021
INR 100.6203
IQD 1518.964126
IRR 48830.055939
ISK 142.179875
JEP 0.858021
JMD 186.099911
JOD 0.822092
JPY 172.164804
KES 150.160816
KGS 101.225304
KHR 4661.248586
KMF 492.210097
KPW 1043.562795
KRW 1614.403457
KWD 0.354197
KYD 0.966673
KZT 630.70398
LAK 25010.72947
LBP 103834.532388
LKR 350.214116
LRD 233.062239
LSL 20.767019
LTL 3.423745
LVL 0.701379
LYD 6.272932
MAD 10.502305
MDL 19.546389
MGA 5136.650061
MKD 61.587333
MMK 2434.490605
MNT 4160.050922
MOP 9.379842
MRU 46.171659
MUR 52.619122
MVR 17.858094
MWK 2013.495456
MXN 21.762755
MYR 4.905899
MZN 74.162566
NAD 20.766895
NGN 1773.917789
NIO 42.612046
NOK 11.816915
NPR 160.770608
NZD 1.941601
OMR 0.445755
PAB 1.160007
PEN 4.225853
PGK 4.809087
PHP 66.307978
PKR 328.200949
PLN 4.262805
PYG 8689.430944
QAR 4.221503
RON 5.072527
RSD 117.12491
RUB 94.327804
RWF 1669.701024
SAR 4.349424
SBD 9.606689
SCR 16.398914
SDG 696.288704
SEK 11.144217
SGD 1.491907
SHP 0.911196
SLE 26.668644
SLL 24314.445985
SOS 662.659194
SRD 42.391791
STD 23999.611173
STN 24.81941
SVC 10.151269
SYP 15075.778905
SZL 20.767027
THB 37.672804
TJS 11.049317
TMT 4.069896
TND 3.327764
TOP 2.715703
TRY 47.041873
TTD 7.888775
TWD 34.405171
TZS 2979.952124
UAH 48.521415
UGX 4158.591419
USD 1.159515
UYU 46.49503
UZS 14609.884106
VES 141.382224
VND 30379.282525
VUV 137.515606
WST 3.175893
XAF 652.69755
XAG 0.030388
XAU 0.00035
XCD 3.133646
XCG 2.090704
XDR 0.804019
XOF 648.168331
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.298058
ZAR 20.761851
ZMK 10437.027722
ZMW 27.202157
ZWL 373.363228
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

  • SCS

    0.2700

    10.85

    +2.49%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.03

    -0.46%

  • CMSC

    0.0150

    22.5

    +0.07%

  • BCC

    -1.4000

    86.74

    -1.61%

  • RIO

    -0.9100

    62.19

    -1.46%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    37.45

    -1.39%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.3700

    23.83

    -1.55%

  • NGG

    -1.8300

    70.32

    -2.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    13.14

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    -0.9600

    51.77

    -1.85%

  • BTI

    -0.4700

    51.78

    -0.91%

  • VOD

    -0.2700

    11.16

    -2.42%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    71.83

    -1.16%

  • BP

    0.4700

    32.67

    +1.44%

Ebola trial vaccines heading to Uganda: WHO
Ebola trial vaccines heading to Uganda: WHO / Photo: BADRU KATUMBA - AFP/File

Ebola trial vaccines heading to Uganda: WHO

Three candidate vaccines against the strain of Ebola wreaking havoc in Uganda will be shipped to the East African country next week for trials, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.

Text size:

Since Uganda declared an Ebola outbreak on September 20, cases have spread across the country, including to the capital Kampala, and have claimed 55 lives, with 22 more believed to have died.

Uganda has been struggling to rein in the outbreak caused by the Sudan strain of the virus, for which there is currently no vaccine.

But UN health agency chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters that vaccine trials would soon begin.

Speaking from the G20 summit in Indonesia, he said a WHO committee of external experts had evaluated candidate vaccines and determined "all three should be included in the planned trial in Uganda".

The WHO and the Ugandan health ministry accepted the committee's recommendation, he said, adding: "We expect the first doses of vaccine to be shipped to Uganda next week."

The WHO hailed the "incredibly fast collaboration" to reach this point.

"Since the outbreak began, the government of Uganda, together with researchers, funders, companies, regulatory authorities and other experts has been working under a global effort coordinated by WHO to accelerate the development and deployment of vaccines for use in trials," Tedros pointed out.

- 'Uncertainty' -

The candidates include a vaccine developed by Oxford University and the Jenner Institute in Britain, and another from the Sabin Vaccine Institute in the United States.

The third candidate came through the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), WHO said.

They will be used in a so-called ring vaccination trial, where all contacts of confirmed Ebola patients, and contacts of contacts are jabbed along with frontline and health workers.

"We have received written confirmation from the developers that sufficient vaccines and sufficient number of doses will be available for the clinical trial, and beyond if necessary," Ana Maria Henao Restrepo, one of WHO's heads of research and development, told reporters.

There is meanwhile concern that progress being made to slow the spread of Ebola even without the jabs could complicate the planned trials.

Such trials can only be run when there is fairly rapid transmission under way of Ebola, a haemorrhagic fever that spreads through close contact with bodily fluids and that is often deadly.

"We have uncertainty... about the evolution of the outbreak," Henao Restrepo said, acknowledging that it remained unclear "how many rings can be formed as part of the trial."

But she stressed that all those involved were committed to pushing ahead with randomised trials in a bid to "generate robust evidence that will allow us to know if one or more of them has the efficacy we hope they have."

- 'Controllable without vaccines' -

WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan insisted it was important to get started, even if lower transmission levels might make it impossible to complete the trials immediately.

"If we have to do this in one or two steps, we will," he told reporters.

At the same time, Ryan emphasised that "this epidemic is controllable without vaccines."

Experience from the far more frequent outbreaks of the Ebola Zaire strain -- for which a vaccine was developed after the massive West Africa outbreak that started in 2013 -- shows that "you can get control much quicker using effective vaccines," he told reporters.

"But just to reassure people in Uganda, we can stop this outbreak based on the current efforts."

Tedros agreed, insisting that Kampala's efforts had already "slowed transmission in most districts."

He pointed out that two districts had not reported any cases for 42 days, "indicating the virus is no longer present in those districts".

But he warned that Jinja had also reported its first case in the past week, "becoming the ninth district to be affected".

In addition to the candidate vaccines, the WHO said a separate group of experts had selected two investigational therapeutics for a trial, which still requires a green light from WHO and Ugandan authorities.

V.Sedlak--TPP