- Text
Inhalable Measles Vaccine Seen as Treatment Boon
Researchers say that a dry, inhalable vaccine developed for measles prevention may also help pave the way for the inexpensive treatment of a range of other illnesses.
More immediately, news of the vaccine should be especially welcomed by less-developed nations, where there is more limited access to medical care. Indeed, measles caused an estimated 164,000 deaths in children worldwide in 2008 - 2/3 of that number coming from India, alone.
The process developed by a team of researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder, basically involves taking a deep breath from the inhalable powdered vaccine - which gets sent straight into a recipient's lungs. Here's a short video explaining how the vaccine works.
Professor Robert Sievers, who led the research time, which developed the vaccine after five years of work, said that needles and syringes frighten some people who would otherwise benefit from treatment. Also, he noted that the unsafe use of needles can foster transmission of diseases under the wrong circumstances.
"It's not just that needles are scary to some but they also have the potential to become disease transmitters in poor counties when people reuse them," he said in an interview with CBSNews.com. He added that problems can crop up when there is inadequate access to clean water and storage. "What happens is that people have to use [the vaccine] in the same day and when it's in liquid form, it can get contaminated in the warm climate of India. So, when someone uses it later in the day, they can get infected; sometimes it can be fatal."
See Also:
PDF: The HPV VaccineSerum Institute: Measles in India
Phase One of the clinical trials to test the safety of the vaccine is scheduled to begin later this year in India. The cost of the measles vaccine is around 10 cents for the device and 17 cents for the dose.
Sievers said his team is now looking at creating a lozenge version of the measles vaccine, "something like breath mint that you put underneath the tongue."
In the future, the technology might have application in the search for effective, less expensive ways to treat human papilloma virus, a sexually transmitted disease that causes cervical cancer. Current treatment for three doses costs $300.
"With every new vaccine that comes along, there has to be a learning period when manufacturers try to make it less expensively and recoup their costs in research and development," according to Sievers. "But if we could make a treatment [for the human papilloma virus] in an easy-to-deliver form and at a lot lower cost, there would be a lot interest in that. It costs more than $300 and that's out of the question for a large percentage of poor villagers in Africa or India."
-
Charles Cooper is an executive editor at CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years, working at CBSNews.com, the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. E-mail Charlie.
- Retro Duo will play your old Nintendo games
- Scientists say online dating doesn't work
- Kids react to seeing iPhone for first time
- Anonymous breaks into Assad's server
- Facebook graffiti artist David Choe, from homeless to millions
- Apple faces $1.6 billion iPad trademark lawsuit
- Apple iPad 3 rumors resurface, sources say March release
- Ethical iPhone 5 petitions head to Apple stores
- Apple iPhone 5 rumors, reports say June release
- iPad manufacturer under fire, Apple responds
- Hackers release Symantec pcAnywhere source code
- Google Earth update erases undersea grid mistaken for "Atlantis"
- Shocking Stats on Texting While Driving
- Hackers tried to extort $50000 from Symantec
- PayPal makes eBay customer destroy $2,500 violin, seller left empty handed
- Pinterest secretly swaps links for profit
- Facebook required for Spotify account, here's a trick
- China skirting African corruption in direct aid
- 10 employee types that drive managers crazy
- How leaders know it's time to quit
- Pakistan: U.S. drone strikes picking back up
on Facebook
- Calif. surfer runs fastest-growing camera company
- Mo. teen gets life in prison for murder of 9-year-old girl
- "Person to Person": Bon Jovi behind the scenes
- Zsa Zsa at 95: Husband releases birthday photos
on CBS News






