醫(yī)學(xué)補充閱讀:New Strategy

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by robert preidt
    thursday, february 16, 2006
    thursday, feb. 16 (healthday news) —— researchers say they've developed a commercially viable process that could enable the mass production of flu vaccines within weeks, instead of the months it now takes.
    this approach uses a purified protein from the surface of a virus called hemagglutinin (the "h" in a virus' designation —— for example —— the h5n1 bird flu virus) to trigger an immune response to a specific strain of virus.
    the genes responsible for production of hemagglutinin are inserted into a pathogen called a baculovirus, which are then used to infect specific host cells. those infected cells produce recombinant hemagglutinin (rha).
    phase ii clinical trials show that the vaccines produced using this method are safe and trigger an immune response equal to or greater than conventional chicken egg-based vaccines.
    the researchers say they've successfully produced rha from four strains of influenza that may trigger a pandemic —— h5, h7, h9 and h2 —— at levels where the cost of vaccine manufacturing would be equal to, or less than, that of traditional egg-based vaccines.
    the results were reported thursday at the american society for microbiology's biodefense research meeting, in washington, d.c.