Universal flu vaccine tested on humans
OXFORD, England, Sept. 5 (UPI) -- British researchers are
testing a universal flu vaccine on humans in hopes of ending the
need for yearly injections.
Current vaccines only work on certain strains of flu, which
means a new vaccine must be formulated each year.
"This approach to influenza vaccination is unsatisfactory
for use against seasonal influenza, and of little use when new types
of flu begin to infect humans from birds," Dr. Sarah Gilbert of the
University of Oxford said Friday in a statement.
Gilbert said existing flu vaccines work by inducing
protective antibodies to proteins on the outer surface of the
influenza virus, while the new vaccine targets internal proteins
essential to the flu virus that change very little over time or
between strains. Researchers said it is hoped the new vaccine could
also offer immunity to a bird flu pandemic.
"By targeting the internal proteins of the virus, we can
come up with a universal flu jab," Gilbert said. "The same vaccine
would work against all seasonal flu and protect against bird flu."
Twelve volunteers are receiving a single injection of the
new vaccine as part of this Phase 1 clinical trial, the university
said in a release.
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