Experts:
Antiquated flu vaccine system needs Monkey Pus update (MB)
http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/diseases/articles/2003/12/21/experts_a
ntiquated_flu_vaccine_system_needs_updating/
By Paul Elias, Associated Press, 12/21/2003
SAN FRANCISCO -- The nation's anxiety over the dwindling supply of flu shots
has exposed an antiquated manufacturing system that depends on 90 million
fertilized chicken eggs and a 9-month process to produce each year's batch
of influenza vaccines. It needn't be that way.
Drug companies and academic researchers say they could reduce the lead time
and prepare more effective vaccines by incubating the virus in monkey cells
rather than eggs -- and by using genetic engineering to remove much of the
guesswork of preventing a disease that kills an average of 36,000 Americans
a year.
Government indifference, business resistance and public apathy have slowed
the adoption of such techniques, vaccine researchers say. But that may
change soon now that federal health officials have responded to the vaccine
shortage with calls for overhauling the system. "In order to scale it up, or
to speed it up, we would have to, really, change the overall approach to
vaccination," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Julie
Gerberding said recently, endorsing the monkey cell process as an important
alternative.
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson added last week that he
hopes some of the new federal funding for flu research will be used to
encourage companies to develop new, egg-free ways to manufacture the
vaccines. The federal interest heartens researchers like Dr. Richard Webby,
who has labored in relative obscurity for years trying to speed up
production of better vaccines.
Webby's work has gotten a lot more attention since it became known that this
year's flu vaccine doesn't contain the prevalent strain of the virus going
around. The world's two largest manufacturers subsequently announced they
had run out of supplies for the first time, even as flu deaths mounted. One
7-year-old Bakersfield boy succumbed while sleeping under his Christmas
tree.
"It's tragic that it has happened this way." Webby said. "But if it helps
make the process more efficient, that will be a benefit." Each February,
World Health Organization doctors meet with an international team of
virologists to identify the flu strains they think will hit the following
winter. They then brew these flu strains in chicken eggs to create a safe
"seed vaccine." It can take weeks or months for the eggs to yield the
seed vaccine, and until the vaccine makers receive the seed and related
biological material from the World Health Organization, they can't begin the
manufacturing
process in earnest.
Webby and colleagues at St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis,
Tenn., hope to speed development of each year's vaccine through "reverse
genetics," which aims to build from scratch perfect flu strains that
reproduce reliably and quickly. "Although the viruses still have to be grown
up in eggs to make vaccines, the initial process of making seed vaccine is
much quicker using reverse
genetics," Webby said.
An even bigger time-saver will come from growing the vaccine in vero cells
-- taken from the kidneys of African green monkeys -- instead of the chicken
eggs, Webby and many others say.
Using vero cells isn't new -- they've have already been used to make a polio
vaccine approved in the United States, and a smallpox vaccine using vero
cells is in the works. And while people allergic to eggs are advised not to
take flu shots, allergic reactions aren't expected to result from the monkey
process, since the cells have been purified to eliminate all genetic traces
of monkeys from the resulting vaccines.
At least two companies, Chiron Corp. and Baxter International, plan
large-scale human experiments next year with cell-made vaccines. Each hopes
for U.S. regulatory approval in 2007 or soon after.
"There is a certain limitation on how many eggs you can get in a timely
manner," said Wayne Morges, a Baxter vice president. "You can't go to the
chicken and say 'lay faster.' We can make course corrections easier with
cells." Baxter of Deerfield, Ill. is putting the finishing touches on a new
factory in the Czech Republic to brew its new vaccine recipe. Baxter hopes
to have European approval in time for the 2005 flu season.
Emeryville-based Chiron and the French-owned Aventis Pasteur make the only
egg-based flu vaccines approved for use in the United States, and since
cell-based vaccines remain years away from the market, Chiron isn't ready to
abandon the egg-based process. "It does have the potential to reduce that
time, Chiron spokesman Rod Budge said. "But it's not going to produce
vaccines overnight."
Egg-incubated vaccines will remain the dominant product for at least the
next few years not only because of regulatory issues but also because
building new factories will take time and money.
Baxter also conceded that its initial vaccine shots will cost more than the
ones currently available.
Aventis Pasteur remains resistant to changing its egg-based process. Aventis
spokesman Len Lavenda argues that the number of new factories and fermenters
needed to satisfy demand for the flu shots are not available and will be
expensive to build.
Also, he said, this flu season is the first in which demand outstripped
supply -- it may turn out to be an anomaly. "This is unprecedented because
we can't remember a time when we ran out of flu vaccine," Lavenda said.
"Public health needs will continue to be best met by egg-based vaccines."

February 23, 2004
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa004&articleID=0005CA0F-B46F-101E-B
40D83414B7F0000
VACCINES
Egg Beaters
Flu vaccine makers look beyond the chicken egg
By Karen Hopkin
Image: BETTMANN/CORBIS
OVER EASY? Researchers hope to replace the decades-old way of making flu
vaccines, which involves injecting viruses into fertilized eggs pierced
with a drill. If you want to make an omelet, you have to break some eggs.
And if you want to supply the U.S. with flu vaccine, you have to break
about 100 million.
That may change someday, as leading vaccine manufacturers explore the
possibility of trading their chicken eggs for stainless-steel culture
vats and growing their flu virus in cell lines derived from humans,
monkeys or dogs. The technology could allow companies to produce their
vaccines in a more timely and less laborious manner and to respond more
quickly in an emergency.
Today's flu vaccines are prepared in fertilized chicken eggs, a method
developed more than 50 years ago. The eggshell is cracked, and the
influenza virus is injected into the fluid surrounding the embryo. The
egg is resealed, the embryo becomes infected, and the resulting virus is
then harvested, purified and used to produce the vaccine. Even with
robotic assistance, "working with eggs is tedious," says Samuel L. Katz
of the Duke University School of Medicine, a member of the vaccine
advisory committee for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. "Opening a
culture flask is a heck of a lot simpler."
Better yet, using cells could shave weeks off the production process,
notes Dinko Valerio, president and CEO of Crucell, a Dutch biotechnology
company developing one of the human cell lines. Now when a new strain of
flu is discovered, researchers often need to tinker with the virus to get
it to reproduce in chicken eggs. Makers using cultured cells could save
time by skipping that step, perhaps even starting directly from the
circulating virus isolated from humans. As an added bonus, the virus
harvested from cells rather than eggs might even look more like the virus
encountered by humans, making it better fodder for a vaccine, adds Michel
DeWilde, executive vice president of R&D at Aventis, the world's largest
producer of flu vaccines and a partner with Crucell in developing flu
shots made from human cells.
Whether vaccines churned out by barrels of cells will be any better than
those produced in eggs "remains to be seen," says the FDA's Roland A.
Levandowski. And for a person getting jabbed in the arm during a regular
flu season, observes Richard Webby, a virologist at St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., "it's not going to matter where the
vaccine came from."

http://www.620ktar.com/news/article.aspx?id=482888
10/23/2004 3:51:00 PM
Vaccine Production Relies on Quaint System
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE AP Medical Writer
The quaint system of producing flu vaccine based on seasonal egg-laying
has harsh implications for what would happen if new batches had to be
made in a hurry to fight a super-strain pandemic. At best, it would take
half a year.
And since chicken flocks for next year's vaccine are already established
and plants already run at full capacity, it's unclear how much Aventis
Pasteur or any single company can goose up production to cover a
shortfall like this year's loss of Chiron Corp.'s vaccine. As Chiron
executive Dr. Kevin Bryett said in an interview two weeks before its
British factory was shut down: "If the market was to change
dramatically, it is almost impossible to turn up production. The primary
issue is access to the eggs. Large numbers of birds cannot be obtained
immediately. It's not something you can just go down to the shop and buy,
eggs off the shelf." A visit to Aventis, America's only flu shot maker,
reveals how much fragile Americans depend on an eggshell-fragile system
to protect them from a killer disease. The Associated Press was allowed
inside last week for a rare, firsthand look.
As the nation struggles with a historic shortage of flu vaccine, the last
batches of this year's supply are being bottled at a slickly run, modern
factory in the Pocono Mountains. A little to the west, in Amish country,
next year's doses are already in the works. At the moment, they have two
legs and soft, downy feathers. By January, they'll be laying millions of
eggs for flu shots. There is far more horse-and-buggy to vaccine
production than just the Amish wagons that creak past Pennsylvania
chicken farms. Vaccines are biological products, not chemicals that can
be cranked out in times of need.
The viruses they're made from need cells in which to grow. Yellow fever
and flu are the only vaccines that use eggs for this _ not the kind that
come from the store but those produced under strict pharmaceutical
conditions.
Flu also is the only vaccine made fresh every year. In late February or
early March, the World Health Organization picks its three strains based
on the virus going around. If it acts too soon, newly emerging strains
can be missed, as Fujian was last year. If it waits too long, vaccine
makers must race against the biological clocks of hens, which only lay
eggs for nine months until they're too old, then rush through a
several-months-long process to make enough vaccine before the flu season
starts. "We're constrained on the front end and the back end. No other
vaccine has that kind of time pressure," said Aventis spokesman Len
Lavenda. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government's top vaccine scientist,
acknowledged the difficulty.
"The ability to have surge capacity when something goes wrong, to turn on
a dime and try and correct it, is difficult," he said in an interview
Thursday. Aventis starts making vaccine more than a year in advance,
around August on nearly 50 farms throughout Pennsylvania. "They're fairly
small operations," many with only 10,000 birds, said Sam Lee, a
40-year-old chemical engineer who is the company's operations team
leader. White leghorn hens are used. The exact type is a company secret.
The breeder holding the patent supplies the eggs, which take 21 days to
hatch and become
chicks.
They're moved in late September into buildings where they can move freely
as opposed to cages and coops, and spend three months maturing into hens.
Egg-laying starts in late December, typically one a day. How many eggs it
takes to make a flu shot is another Aventis secret, but Chiron's Bryett
said: "If you're very lucky, you'll get three doses per egg." That's for
a single flu strain; three strains go into each dose of vaccine. The
fertilized eggs are collected by two large egg producers, who incubate
them for seven to 12 days and then bring them to Aventis. Eggs delivered
in January would hatch into chicks if not used for vaccine, so
manufacturers often gamble and start making whichever of the three flu
strains WHO seems most likely to choose.
"Any production before February is done at the company's risk," Lee said.
A machine punches a tiny hole in each shell and a needle inoculates the
chick embryo with a single flu strain. The virus is allowed to multiply
for about three days. Then the eggs are broken, and the fluid around the
embryo containing the virus is collected and purified. Formaldehyde is
added to inactivate the flu virus, and a machine spins the mixture to
separate out the part containing virus. Once again, eggs are needed: A
sample of the spun solution is put back in the eggs to see if any
virus grows _ a test to ensure the germ was inactivated. A few more
processing steps turn it into a lot, or batch, of several hundred
thousand doses of a single strain.
Next comes sterility testing where vaccine is spread onto lab dishes and
checked to see if it contains contaminating bacteria. "We haven't had a
contamination in years," Lee said.
It's not known whether this step is where Chiron's vaccine was discovered
to be tainted with serratia bacteria or if it happened later. As Aventis
tests for sterility, samples also go to the Food and Drug Administration,
which doesn't start its testing until late May or early June because it
has to brew specific chemicals each year to test specific strains. After
that, three viral strains are combined to form the trivalent vaccine.
Four weeks of potency and sterility testing follow, then packaging into
single-dose syringes and 10-dose vials and quality checks for potency.
The last doses are made by the end of September. Chicken farms are free
to sell old birds and must do a mandatory cleanout and disinfection to
get ready to start the whole process all over again. As cumbersome as
this egg-based vaccine recipe may seem, "it has been over the years a
reliable, time-tested and reasonably efficient way to get virus grown,"
Fauci said. "Changing that requires genuinely a very, very large
investment" to make a product sold only once a year and for a pittance
compared to expensive cholesterol pills and other drugs that people take
every day, said Dr. William Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University flu expert
who advises the government on vaccines.
"Vaccines in general and flu in particular are undervalued. Prices are
not at the level they should be to attract new investments," Aventis'
Lavenda agreed. Aventis has partnered with a company in the Netherlands,
Crucell, to research using human and animal cells in place of eggs. These
so-called cell cultures could be maintained indefinitely and ramped up on
demand whenever vaccine is needed. It's pricey technology, but cost isn't
the only obstacle. Some worry that the genetic material of these
cells might interact with the flu viruses, creating dangerous hybrids and
undercutting the purpose of the vaccine.
"If it changes the virus, obviously, that would not be desirable,"
Chiron's Bryett said. Such technology is at least a couple years away,
said Fauci, whose office is funding many such studies.
"There are safety issues, consistency issues," he said. "That's the
reason why you do research on it. If it was just sticking the virus in a
cell culture and go, we would have done it a long time ago." So we're
stuck with eggs for next year and probably several more. The government
has plans in the works to encourage chicken farmers to maintain
year-round flocks so eggs would be available anytime in case a new
single-strain vaccine had to be made to fight a pandemic.
"Right now we don't have the capacity to reliably create all the vaccine
we would need in that situation," Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the
federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a news
conference earlier this year. "It is clear that we need to substantially
expand our options," including looking at whether the vaccine really
needs to be updated every year, Dr. John Treanor, another government
vaccine adviser from the University of Rochester, wrote in a recent New
England Journal of Medicine article.
Public health officials have worried much about bioterrorism, a threat of
unknown proportions. Instead, Treanor writes, the nation has been caught
offguard and threatened by a long familiar foe, "a virus that predictably
_ in each and every year _ causes major mortality and morbidity."

http://tinyurl.com/etwew
FDA gives MedImmune OK on new way to make FluMist
Md. biotech to use 'reverse genetics'
By Tricia Bishop
Sun reporter
Originally published July 7, 2006
A technique widely used to produce possible pandemic flu vaccines will soon
be used to make at least one seasonal version: MedImmune Inc. announced
yesterday that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given it the
go-ahead to create its nasally inhaled FluMist using "reverse genetics."
Though the manufacturing process won't affect the FluMist's formulation or
the way it is administered, the technique is thought to be a more efficient
and reliable means of production - faster and safer than the current
standard. The company says it will be the only vaccine on the market using
this technique.
MedImmune, based in Gaithersburg, is hoping that others will follow its lead
and license the technology.
"The technique allows the rapid generation of seed viruses for vaccine
candidates that exactly match the anticipated epidemic strain," said
congressional testimony from Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases - or NIAID.
The typical way of making flu vaccines - called "classical reassortment" -
dates to the 1960s and requires a lot of time-consuming guesswork by
scientists. It involves injecting two flu strains into a fertilized chicken
egg, where they mix and multiply into as many as 256 gene combinations.
Researchers then sort through all of those combinations to find the one they
want to manufacture as that season's vaccine.
In reverse genetics, scientists can specifically construct the combination
of flu strains they need. They do this by splicing genes together and
manufacturing the seeds of the vaccine in mammal cells - in MedImmune's
case, kidney cells from an African green monkey. They also can remove any
harmful pieces of the flu virus and modify its reproduction rate.
MedImmune has been working with NIAID to create a library of pandemic flu
vaccines from which mass amounts could be made if a pandemic occurred.
The company also has offered to license its reverse genetics technology to
others. In December, MedImmune acquired the final exclusive license to the
last of four intellectual property portfolios that govern the use of reverse
genetics in making human flu vaccines. That means anyone else who wants to
get in on it has to get the company's permission first.
"It's a technological improvement over the way things are done today," said
Philip Nadeau, a biotechnology analyst with S.G. Cowen & Co. LLC. "It seems
to me they should be interested in licensing." He does not own stock in
MedImmune, nor does his company have an investment relationship with
MedImmune.
Nadeau also said the technology should help MedImmune "improve the
reliability of FluMist's production."
FluMist's record has been marked by disappointing sales, overproduction and
under-adoption.
A second-generation of the vaccine, called CAIV-T, , is under development,
and should be ready by the 2007-2008 flu season. MedImmune is hoping CAIV-T
doesn't have the same problems that FluMist has encountered. That version
was approved for a limited population, and some had concerns that the live
virus it's based on would make them sick.
MedImmune's stock closed up a penny to $26.61 on the Nasdaq yesterday.
Though reverse genetics is considered something of an advance in the
flu-vaccine world, it hasn't revolutionized the process. It still relies on
chicken eggs to reproduce enough of the vaccine to provide doses for the
population, a process that President Bush called "antiquated" last year.
Several groups are trying to develop a cell-based production process that
would take the chickens out of the mix. MedImmune has been given a $170
million contract from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to
study the possibility of producing the vaccine using cells such as the
monkey's, which would make it available to people who have poultry allergies
and can't receive the vaccines.
"That's still several years away from being a tangible product, but there's
a lot of work going on right now." said George W. Kemble, vice president of
research and development at MedImmune Vaccines Inc., a Mountain View,
Calif.-based arm of the Gaithersburg biotechnology company.
Last fall, Bush asked Congress for several billion dollars to develop a
"crash program" of cell-based manufacturing for pandemic influenza vaccines.
The technique has been used since the 1950s to create vaccines for diseases,
including polio, measles and mumps.
But flu vaccine manufacturers have avoided it, sticking with the tried and
true egg method, in part because changing the system will likely cost
billions of dollars.
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