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first vaccine against bird flu is even less effective than previously thought |
The nation's first vaccine against bird flu is even less effective than previously thought, according to Food and Drug Administration documents released Monday.
In clinical trials, the two-shot series appears to provide protection to just 45 percent of adults who received the highest dose of the Sanofi Aventis SA vaccine.
An earlier, interim analysis of the same study of the vaccine suggested it sparked a protective immune response in 54 percent of patients, when measured 28 days after getting the second shot. The New England Journal of Medicine published those results in March 2006.
The FDA released the more recent results, contained in company and agency documents, ahead of a Tuesday meeting where it will ask a panel of outside experts to review the vaccine. The agency isn't required to follow the advice of its advisory committees, but usually does. The vaccine is the first against the H5N1 influenza strain to seek FDA approval.
The FDA said the 452-person study showed the vaccine against the deadly bird-flu strain called H5N1 is safe, but it remained unclear whether it would be effective. Seasonal flu vaccines, for example, protect 75 percent to 90 percent of vaccinated adults younger than 65.
The newer analysis used final data, while the earlier study used interim results, Sanofi said. The later analysis also used tougher standards to show the vaccine works, according to company documents released by the FDA. The Paris-based company said the study shows the vaccine's benefits outweigh its risks.
The modest protective effects of the vaccine were seen in patients who received two 90-microgram doses of vaccine. The two shots contain 12 times the 15-microgram dose contained in regular winter flu shots.
Health officials also are studying the development of cell-based vaccines, which would be faster to produce in an outbreak of deadly flu than are current egg-based vaccines. The FDA suggested the Sanofi vaccine, if approved, could be used on an interim basis until others are developed.
Health officials worldwide worry the strain could mutate into a form that easily spreads from person to person, sparking a pandemic.
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