Contributed by William Angelos| 05 November, 2004  06:54 GMT

The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services has awarded an $877.5 million contract to VaxGen, Inc. to manufacture and deliver 75 million doses of a new anthrax vaccine, according to HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson.
The full supply of the vaccine will
be added to the Strategic National Stockpile and would be used to protect
the public against a terrorist attack in which anthrax spores were released.
"The intentional release of anthrax spores is one of the most significant
biological threats we face," Secretary Thompson said. "Acquiring a stockpile
of this new anthrax vaccine is a key step toward protecting the American
public against another anthrax attack."
Neutralizes Anthrax Toxins
VaxGen, based in Brisbane, Calif., will produce the new anthrax vaccine
using purified recombinant protective antigen (rPA), a protein that elicits antibodies that neutralize anthrax toxins, thus providing protective immunity. Evidence from laboratory and animal research has shown that the
rPA vaccine is effective in providing protection against aerosol exposure to
deadly anthrax spores. In addition, clinical testing has shown the rPA
vaccine to be safe in humans.
The vaccine is being evaluated as a three-dose vaccination series. Based on
75 million doses, this regimen would provide sufficient anthrax vaccine to
protect 25 million people. The contract awarded today requires VaxGen to
obtain licensure from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for using the
new vaccine in both pre- and post-anthrax exposure settings.
The vaccine
will be made using modern manufacturing technologies, and the FDA will
review the vaccine production process along with testing of individual test
lots of vaccine to assure its safety and effectiveness. The contract with
VaxGen is a fixed-price contract, which protects taxpayers from any cost
overruns.
Protection Against Bioterrorism
HHS, through its National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
(NIAID) at the National Institutes of Health, funded the development of rPA
vaccine beginning in September 2002 as part of its broader effort to
accelerate research into developing new medical countermeasures against
potential bioterror attacks. This effort was based on more than a decade of
basic rPA vaccine research carried out by the Department of Defense.
This award represents the first contract under the Project BioShield, a new
program intended to accelerate the development, purchase and availability of
medical countermeasures for biological, chemical, radiological and nuclear
threats. President Bush introduced Project BioShield in his 2003 State of
the Union address. Congress passed the Project BioShield Act of 2004 and
the President signed it into law on July 21, 2004.
New Medical Countermeasure
"In an exceptionally short period of time, we have dramatically accelerated
our research capacity to develop a new medical countermeasure against one of
the most deadly agents of bioterrorism," said Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.,
director of NIAID. "Without Project BioShield, we would likely still be
years away from a new anthrax vaccine and today's announcement might never
have been possible."
HHS' Office of Public Health Emergency Preparedness, which oversees the
research and procurement efforts under the Project BioShield program, will
manage this new rPA anthrax vaccine contract. |