The FIV vaccine is completely NOT ever recommended by anyone of authority in 
animal
medicine. Most responsible vets don't use it at all, because it makes the cat 
it's
given to test positive for FIV for the rest of their life.

As for the person who stated that it only protected against certain forms of the
virus, that is correct:

There are five strains of FIV virus, called "Clades."  The vaccine was made 
using
Clades A and D and tested using Clade A. Clade B, for example, is a very common
strain in most regions of the U.S. and no testing of the vaccine has been 
performed
thus far against Clade B.  This means that a pet owner might wrongly believe 
they
were protecting their cat fully against the FIV virus with this vaccine. 
California
has both Clades A and B.


Here's the article that went out when the current FIV vaccine was first 
approved by
thye FDA for use in cats:

FELINE IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS: VACCINE
March 25, 2002
Source: AScribe Newswire, 22 Mar 2002 [edited]
First Vaccine for Cat AIDS Approved for Veterinary Use
The first vaccine for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) was approved for
commercial production and veterinary use today by the U.S.  Department of
Agriculture (USDA).
The patented vaccine for this disease, which is a cat form of AIDS, has been
licensed for manufacture to Fort Dodge Animal Health, a division of Wyeth.
Patents for the vaccine are held by the University of California and the
University of Florida.
The vaccine should be available to veterinarians by this summer. "This
vaccine offers the first effective protection for cats against this often
fatal disease," said Niels Pedersen, director of the Center for Companion
Animal Health and an international authority on retroviruses and immunologic
disorders of small animals. "The success of the FIV vaccine also offers hope
that eventually a vaccine will be developed that will effectively protect
against AIDS in humans."
Pedersen and immunologist Janet Yamamoto, now a professor in the University
of Florida's College of Veterinary Medicine, first isolated the FIV in cats
at UC Davis in 1986. Yamamoto began work on a vaccine for the virus at UC
Davis and continued her research at the University of Florida, Gainesville.
She has worked with researchers at Fort Dodge Animal Health for more than a
decade to develop the vaccine.
"We are delighted that many years of research are now coming to fruition and
providing cat owners and veterinarians with a protective vaccine for FIV,"
added Larry Fox, director of technology transfer for UC Davis. Fox formerly
was director of Corporate Molecular Biology at Abbott Laboratories, where he
was involved in development of the first HIV assay and a subsequent
recombinant DNA assay for HIV.
Research on vaccines for the different viruses that cause AIDS in cats,
monkeys, and humans continues at UC Davis, which has the distinction of
being home to a veterinary school, medical school, and a regional primate
research center.
Feline immunodeficiency virus is transmitted from cat to cat mainly through
bite  wounds, because the virus is present at high levels in the saliva.
Like human AIDS, the virus attacks the body's immune system, making the
animal susceptible to diseases and infections that usually would have little
effect on an FIV-free animal.
Cats infected with FIV may remain healthy for 5 to 10 years before symptoms
such as diarrhea, weight loss, fever, swollen lymph nodes, and chronic
infections appear. Although infected cats may recover from their initial
illness, they become lifelong carriers of the virus.
It is estimated that between 2 percent and 25 percent of the global domestic
cat population is infected with the virus, according to the USDA. Infection
rates are highest in Japan and Australia and lowest in the United States and
Europe. Outdoor roaming cats, older cats, and cats with chronic ill-health
are more likely to be infected.  Aggressive free-roaming males, which are
most likely to get into fights with other cats, are at greatest risk for
contracting FIV.
FIV does not infect or cause disease in humans.
The newly approved vaccine is known as a "killed vaccine," made from an
inactivated form of the FIV virus itself. The vaccine stimulates the
protective immune response in the animal's body without the danger of
inadvertently causing the viral disease. The new vaccine is composed of
virus strains from 2 different types of FIV, 1 from North America and 1 from
Asia.
In a study demonstrating the efficacy of the vaccine, cats received 3 doses
of the FIV vaccine and a year later were exposed to a different strain of
the virus. It was found that 67 percent of the vaccinated cats were
protected against the virus, while 74 percent of the non-vaccinated cats
became infected with FIV. Studies indicate that the vaccine provides
protection against FIV for at least 12 months.

Now THIS is interesting, as far as FIV vaccines is concerned. This is NEWER 
studies
being done by the same person who invented the current FIV vaccine:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=30451

Dr. Yamamoto's webpage for her FIV vaccine:
http://patho.vetmed.ufl.edu/Faculty%20Pages/Yamamoto/yammamoto_FIV.htm

The entire history of the discovery of FIV (by the same person as mentioned 
above as
the "inventor" of the vaccine:
http://www.scripps.edu/newsandviews/e_20030414/print-elder.html

More info on the FIV Vaccine:
http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_fiv_vaccine.html
http://www.avma.org/onlnews/javma/nov02/021101a.asp
http://www.aafponline.org/resources/statements/felovax.htm


More FIV vaccine studies:
http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/74/23/10911



Phaewryn

PLEASE Adopt a cat from Little Cheetah Cat Rescue!!!
http://ucat.us/adopt.html

DONATE: We could really use a power saw (for construction), a digital camera 
(for
pictures) and HOMES for CATS!



-- 
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.394 / Virus Database: 268.9.2/372 - Release Date: 6/21/2006


Reply via email to