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CDC to destroy oldest smallpox vaccine 2-29-08
The government announced Friday that it has said goodbye to one of the
world's greatest lifesavers _ the original smallpox vaccine. The U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention this month made arrangements to dispose of
its 12 million doses of Dryvax, and notified other health departments and the
military to do the same by Feb. 29.
Dryvax _ produced by scraping virus off the skin of infected calves _ is being
replaced in federal vaccine stockpiles by a more modern product manufactured in
laboratories.
Dryvax was unusually dangerous for a vaccine, blamed in recent years for
triggering heart attacks and a painful heart inflammation in some patients.
Still, attention should be paid on the occasion of its demise, said Dr. William
Schaffner, chairman of Vanderbilt University's department of preventive
medicine.
It is a "historical moment, because it's our oldest vaccine," Schaffner said.
"It was a vaccine that eliminated smallpox from the United States."
Smallpox is a deadly, infectious disease that plagued the world for centuries
and killed nearly a third of the people it infected. Victims suffered scorching
fever and body aches, then spots and blisters that would leave survivors with
pitted scars.
Smallpox is a deadly, infectious disease that plagued the world for centuries
and killed nearly a third of the people it infected. Victims suffered scorching
fever and body aches, then spots and blisters that would leave survivors with
pitted scars.
Dryvax was created in the late 1800s, by the company that became Wyeth
Laboratories. Wyeth was a primary U.S. manufacturer of smallpox vaccine by the
mid-1940s, and was the only company left making it by the early 1960s, said Dr.
D.A. Henderson, a University of Pittsburgh vaccine expert who played a key role
in international smallpox eradication efforts.
The United States was able to end routine childhood vaccination against the
disease by the early 1970s. World health authorities declared the disease was
eradicated from nature in 1980.
Click here to find out more!
Wyeth stopped making the vaccine in the 1980s. But government officials kept a
stockpile of about 15 million doses. The Dryvax came in handy in 2003, when it
was used to help contain an outbreak of monkeypox in the United States.
"There are situations where one does have to have a smallpox vaccine," said Dr.
Neal Halsey, director of John Hopkins University's Institute for Vaccine Safety.
U.S. officials had also been worried that smallpox might resurface as a result
of bioterrorism. Following the 9/11 attacks and the anthrax-containing letters
that surfaced a month later, the government in 2002 ordered certain military
personnel vaccinated and recommended shots for front-line health care workers.
The government also pushed for manufacture of a new vaccine. It hired a
company named Acambis Inc., which had produced nearly 200 million doses by the
end of 2003, Henderson said.
Last September, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved licensure of the
company's ACAM2000 vaccine. That product is now the mainstay of the CDC
stockpile, Henderson said.
Dryvax had problems. It was long suspected of triggering neurological
complications, including encephalitis, in rare cases. Then, in 2003, three
adults who received the vaccine died suddenly of heart attacks. As a precaution,
health officials advised people with heart disease to skip the vaccination.
A study published in 2005 suggested that Dryvax triggered a painful heart
inflammation in a small number of emergency workers vaccinated after Sept. 11.
"Times had changed, and our awareness, sensitivity and tolerance for adverse
events associated with vaccines was much greater" than during the smallpox
vaccination campaigns of the 20th century, Schaffner said.
ACAM2000 is created in laboratories, not on a farm, so there's much less
possibility of bacterial contamination in the production process. However, it's
derived from Dryvax, and it's not clear it will have fewer side effects than the
old vaccine, some vaccine experts said.
Comment:
This is good news! This Vaccine contained microbial contaminants, the new
vaccine does not. However it does contain all the same other antibiotics and
coal tar derivatives.. It does not contain any heavy metals. I personally have
not been vaccinated for this conventionally, I did however use a homeopathic
preparation.
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