Wouldnt it be something if it were as simple as a star fruit which drug 
companies have taken and made huge profits from.......

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1015-02.htm
A rare herb grown in China used to flavor duck dishes and treat infants for 
colic is at the center of a worldwide search for a cure for avian flu. 
                                                         Star anise, the 
unusual fruit of a small oriental tree, is sold in supermarkets in the UK to 
consumers seeking its pungent, licorice-like flavor
 But the herb has a vital function as the source of shikimic acid from which 
the drug Tamiflu is made, the only defense the world currently has against the 
threatened flu pandemic.
                                   

                                    

                      Tamiflu cannot prevent infection with avian flu but it 
can reduce its severity. In the absence of an effective vaccine - which has not 
yet been developed - it is all that stands between the world and what could 
become a modern plague.
 Yesterday it emerged that a shortage of star anise is one of the key reasons 
why countries including Britain cannot obtain enough Tamiflu to protect their 
populations. European Union ministers met yesterday to discuss measures to 
reduce contact between wild birds and poultry to curb its spread.
As moves to halt the growing threat of avian flu intensified, governments 
sought to stockpile the only drug currently available to offer any sort of 
defense for humans. The herb from which Tamiflu is made is grown in four 
provinces in China and "huge quantities" of its seeds are needed, according to 
the Swiss pharmaceutical manufacturer Roche. It is harvested by local farmers 
between March and May, purified and the shikimic acid extracted at the start of 
a 10-stage manufacturing process which takes a year.
  Only star anise grown in the four provinces of China is suitable for 
manufacture into Tamiflu and 90 per cent of the harvest is already used by 
Roche.
 The company has faced demands to relax the patent on the drug to allow other 
manufacturers to produce it.
 Keith Taylor, of the Green Party, said: "Some countries have asked the World 
Health Organization to pressure Roche into relinquishing the patent in order to 
allow a cheaper, generic version of the drug to be produced on a national level.
 "The WHO refuses, citing Roche's donation of three million treatment courses 
as evidence that Roche is being responsible. This decision jeopardizes millions 
of lives in the name of profit and is anything but responsible."
 However, Roche responded by saying: "Because of the shortage of the raw 
material it would be very difficult for another manufacturer to set up 
production."
 The UK Government has ordered 14.6 million courses of Tamiflu, enough for 25 
per cent of the population, but only 2.5 million courses have so far been 
delivered. Other countries, including the United States, are behind the UK in 
the queue. Roche said it had doubled production of Tamiflu in 2004, doubled it 
again in 2005 and planned to double it again next year. But it said calls for 
the patent on the drug to be removed so that other companies could boost 
manufacturing capacity to meet the worldwide demand would not work.
 The spokeswoman said: "It would take two to three years for another company to 
build the manufacturing capacity. The process is very complicated and the drug 
takes us 12 months to produce. Once you have built the facilities you have to 
get regulatory approval and the manufacturing licenses.
 "And then there is the shortage of the raw material."
 Roche has developed a synthetic source of acidinic acid, made from the 
bacterium E Coli. Vast quantities of E Coli are mixed with glucose in vats the 
size of two buses. But star anise remains the chief source, the company said.
  Once shikimic acid is extracted from the seeds of star anise it is converted 
to epoxide in a process requiring three chemical steps carried out at low 
temperature on seven separate sites.
 The most dangerous part of the process involves the conversion of epoxide into 
azide in a reaction that produces highly explosive material. This is carried 
out by specialist companies that handle the material in small quantities to 
reduce the risk of explosion.
 Currently only one US company and two European companies are approved by the 
drug regulatory authorities in America and Europe to carry out the process.
 The final step involves the production of crystal strands of the active 
ingredient of Tamiflu, whose chemical name is oseltamivir, which are vacuum 
dried and converted to capsules.



      
  
  Carol Ann
   
     _______________________________
  The Pessimist complains about the Wind;  
  The Optimist expects it to change;  
  The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.  
    




                        
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