RUSSIA WILL SEND EBOLA VACCINE TO THE WESTERN PART OF AFRICA
“Today we are discussing that we will have
enough of Triazoverin vaccine in two months so that we can send them to our
personnel in Guinea and test its efficiency in clinical conditions,” Health
Minister Veronika Skvortsova said.
The vaccine has so far proved efficient against various
hemorrhagic fevers, including the Marburg virus which is very similar to Ebola.
“The efficiency ranges between 70 and 90 percent
and this is a very good indicator,” Skvortsova said.
Russia’ Virology Institute is preparing a whole group of drugs.
“They are basically genetically engineered
drugs which can work both for disease treatment and prevention,” Skvortsova
said.
Russian virologists, who have set up a laboratory in Guinea, are
preparing to test the vaccine on primates.
“The vaccine we have produced is made from
the attenuated strains [of the virus]. We now have enough to repeat the
experiment on the primates and proceed to clinical trials.”
On Sunday, Skvortsova announced that Russian scientists are
working on three potential Ebola vaccines which they expect to introduce as
soon as in the next six months.
"We have created three vaccines,”
she said in an interview with Rossiya-1 TV. “One vaccine is based on a
strain of Ebola, and the other two have been created by means of genetic
engineering.”
As of October 8, a total of 4,033 people had died from the Ebola
outbreak, out of a total of 8,399 registered cases in seven countries, the
World Health Organization (WHO) reported. For now, Liberia is the worst-hit
with 4,076 cases and 2,316 deaths. It is followed by Sierra Leone, where there
are 2,950 cases and 930 deaths.
According to the WHO, the fatality rate associated with Ebola
averages roughly 50 percent, but has ranged from 25 percent to 90 percent in
past outbreaks.
Comments