The leading vaccines
for Ebola will soon be tested in healthy volunteers in Africa, according to the
World Health Organization.
At a press
conference Friday, Marie-Paule Kieny, who leads the WHO Ebola vaccine work,
suggested there has been real promise offered from initial tests of two of the
vaccines being studied. One comes from Merck and NewLink and the other is
licensed by GlaxoSmithKline.
Both vaccines have
"an acceptable safety profile" meaning there are no adverse effects
that would keep it from being tested in a broader population.
Trials of the
vaccines in Africa should start soon. Health care workers will be among some of
the first volunteers to be a part of this next stage of the test.
Earlier, the trial of
the vaccine made by Merck and NewLink were stopped in December after some of
the volunteers in the trial had "transient mild" joint pain. After
investigating that side effect, scientists concluded it was not a big enough
issue to stop the development of the vaccine. No similar side effects were
noted in the other vaccine trial.
There are other
Ebola vaccines being tested by companies in the United States and in Russia.
While the Ebola
epidemic seems to be slowing, people are still dying from the infections. To
date, there have been 19,340 cases with 7,518 deaths in the countries most
impacted by the epidemic, according to the latest WHO report.
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