http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/science/story.jsp?story=84057



British scientists make half a million doses of anthrax vaccine

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

18 July 2001

Britain has resumed production of an anthrax vaccine designed to protect
troops against one of the most deadly agents in the arsenal of biological
warfare.

The Ministry of Defence has received up to half a million doses of the
vaccine which will be offered voluntarily to its personnel serving in the
Persian Gulf and other regions of the world thought to be at risk of
biological attack.

Scientists at the Government's Centre for Applied Microbiology and Research
(CAMR) at Porton Down in Wiltshire have produced the vaccine using a new �2m
production facility which has taken two years to build.

Anthrax is caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis which produces spores
and toxins that can cause skin infections, fever, breathing difficulties and
toxic shock.

During the 1991 Gulf War, CAMR supplied the Ministry of Defence with enough
anthrax vaccine to inoculate tens of thousands of troops who were thought to
be at risk of biological attack from Saddam Hussein.

Military experts feared that Iraq might use anthrax bombs which spray a fine
aerosol containing enough spores to cause the pulmonary form of the disease
when inhaled.

There is a risk of pulmonary anthrax if more than about 10,000 spores are
breathed in. The symptoms can appear within two days and can eventually kill
upto 90 per cent of victims.

CAMR is thought to be one of only a few places in the world capable of making
anthrax vaccine. The West's other production facility, in the United States,
has been closed down and does not currently have a licence from the US Food
and Drug Administration.

"The facility is currently the only one anywhere in the world which is able
to manufacture a licensed vaccine against anthrax," said a spokesman for the
centre.

CAMR grows a "disabled" strain of the bacteria in large fermenting vats and
makes the vaccine by isolating bacterial proteins that generate a protective
immune response when injected into the bloodstream.

Anthrax normally infects domestic animals, such as cattle and sheep, and is
endemic in some parts of the world, such as South and Central America,
Southern and Eastern Europe, as well as wide areas of Asia, Africa, the
Caribbean and the Middle East.

In addition to supplying the Ministry of Defence, CAMR will also produce the
vaccine for the Department of Health and veterinary organisations.

"CAMR will continue to produce the vaccine in the future to ensure that the
UK retains the capability to protect its armed forces from the threat of this
element of biological warfare. It will also continue to supply the vaccine to
meet public-health requirements," the spokesman said.


Reply via email to