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Fox News: November 20, 2001 - Their strategy: Sift through
the hundreds of potential virus medicines developed by drug companies
to see if any work against smallpox. Chances are good, they say,
because 21 drugs have already been identified this way that can
kill the virus in a test tube.
Whether any of these will pan out in people is uncertain,
but clearly the treatment of viral illnesses has undergone a
revolution since smallpox was eliminated more than two decades
ago. At that time, no medicine could touch a virus. Now there
are drugs for flu, herpes, AIDS and other viral illnesses.
Army scientists who lead the effort say they believe using
drugs already on hand rather than creating medicines from scratch
will identify treatments to attack this awesome killer.
Until recently, scientists paid little attention to smallpox.
But fear of it falling into the hands of bioterrorists has changed
that, and the government is using modern research tools to take
a detailed look at the virus.
Besides searching for medicines, they are decoding smallpox's
genes, creating quick tests for infection and finding new ways
to check their theories in lab animals.
Most of this is overseen by the U.S. Army Medical Research
Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md., and the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. It is
done at the CDC's high-security labs, the only place in the United
States where smallpox is kept.
Smallpox is thought to have killed more people than any other
infection in human history, including the Black Death in the
Middle Ages. In the 20th Century alone, it took at least 500
million lives.
"We have to do the research, because the risk is so monumental,"
says Dr. Craig E. Smith, a bioterrorism expert at Phoebe Putney
Memorial Hospital in Albany, Ga.
Despite the uniquely rampant way it spreads through the air
and kills, some of the internal workings of smallpox are similar
to other viruses. So scientists reason that antiviral drugs already
on the market for other uses might stop smallpox, just as one
antibiotic can kill many kinds of bacteria.
They discovered five years ago that a drug used for an AIDS
complication could kill the smallpox virus in lab cultures. The
drug, called cidofovir or Vistide, is used to treat eye infections
caused by cytomegalovirus, which can afflict people with HIV-weakened
immune defenses.
But the drug has a drawback: It must be given by injection,
which could slow its use in an emergency. So scientists have
tested other drugs, including some still in early development
or that failed against their intended targets.
Dr. Peter Jahrling, who heads the Army's smallpox research,
said the most potent are cidofovir and five similar compounds
that can be given in pill form, along with 15 others that attack
the virus in different ways. So far, all seem reasonably safe.
Other possible candidates have come to the Army's attention
since Sept. 11 and the anthrax attacks. "Big pharma is banging
down our doors saying they've got things to test," says
Jahrling. "Maybe it's patriotism or maybe it's because they
see a market."
He predicts that within five years, they will identify two
drugs to treat smallpox by completely different biological means.
Jahrling hopes to begin testing cidofovir next spring on monkeys
at CDC. Recently, his team proved that macaque monkeys can fall
ill from human smallpox, which previously was thought only to
harm people. Researchers used a strain of the virus isolated
in India in 1964, the same one the Russians turned into a biological
weapon.
People catch smallpox by breathing the virus, but monkeys
get sick only if they get a large injected dose. The animals
also die within a week, which is much faster than people succumb.
However, Jahrling hopes to fine-tune the strain of virus and
the infection strategy so their disease more closely mimics the
human variety.
Since smallpox treatments cannot be tested in infected people,
the researchers hope to use monkeys. Otherwise, testing must
be done with related microbes, such as the monkey pox virus,
that naturally target animals.
Researchers have also developed a 20-minute test for smallpox
infection. In monkeys, the results are positive within a day
of the animals' exposure.
In addition, scientists are poring over the virus's genes
to understand how the strains vary. The CDC has 461 samples and
is concentrating on 45. Scientists have deciphered the genes
of eight of them.
As viruses go, smallpox is a complicated one with nearly 200
genes. With the information gathered so far, scientists will
know quickly if a terrorist attack involves a virus that has
been genetically modified to make it even more dangerous. But
they are just beginning to unravel the genes' workings. |