A reformulated oral vaccine against cholera promises to be an affordable and effective weapon to combat the disease for people living in endemic areas of developing countries, according to a new study.
The internationally licensed cholera vaccine currently available is too expensive for use in developing countries, where it is most needed.
To kick-start the process of scaling up this vaccine in developing countries around the globe, the vaccine was reformulated to comply with WHO standards. Researchers from
The study evaluated the vaccine's safety and efficacy outside
Participants were healthy and included 101 adults aged 18–40 years and 100 children aged 1–17 years. They received two random doses of either the vaccine or a placebo, 14 days apart. After immunization, 53 per cent of the adults and 80 per cent of the children showed at least a four-fold increase in their antibody levels against Vibrio cholerae O1, the predominant strain of cholera-causing bacteria.
Safety tests revealed that "no adverse event occurred more frequently in the vaccinated than in the placebo group", say the researchers.
"Cholera affects a large number of children in developing countries, and so a vaccine that is safe and effective for children sounds impressive, and the development as a whole appears to be a step towards global rolling out of the cholera vaccine," says Sumana Kanjilal, associate professor of paediatric medicine at
The reformulated vaccine is now undergoing a trial in around 70,000 people in Kolkata. "If the vaccine is found to be safe and protective, this could pave the way for the use of this vaccine in the control of cholera worldwide," the researchers write.
The study was published in PLoS ONE. Link to full paper in PLoS ONE
This story, entitled Cheaper cholera vaccine passes pilot trial, was written by Sanjit Bagchi and published 23 June 2008 by SciDev.Net, the Science and Development Network, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to providing reliable and authoritative information about science and technology for the developing world. Its website gives policymakers, researchers, the media and civil society information and a platform to explore how science and technology can reduce poverty, improve health and raise standards of living around the world.
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