Category: Vaccine

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In a 1st, HIV vaccine triggers rare and elusive antibodies in humans – Livescience.com

May 27, 2024

An HIV vaccine is one step closer to reality following a human trial that produced rare and elusive antibodies, a new study reports.

Many hurdles stand in the way of an effective HIV vaccine. The virus is a master of evasion, dodging the immune system by coating itself in sugars that resemble those made by the body, said Dr. Barton Haynes, a leader of the recent trial and director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute. The virus also mutates rapidly, changing its form so that the immune system struggles to make antibodies that can grab hold of it.

A major goal in HIV vaccine development is triggering the production of broadly neutralizing antibodies, which latch onto parts of the virus's outer coating, or envelope, that are very similar between different HIV strains. This makes the antibodies protective against a wide variety of strains, regardless of how they mutate.

The challenge is that "these antibodies, naturally during infection, are very rare to find," said Thomas Hope, a professor of cell and developmental biology who studies HIV at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "It takes a couple years of real infection to make these antibodies," said Hope, who was not involved in the new study but has collaborated with some of its authors in the past.

Related: We could end the AIDS epidemic in less than a decade. Here's how.

Vaccines typically work by eliciting a similar immune reaction to what's seen during a real infection. But in the case of HIV, vaccine developers have to dramatically expedite the process, calling forth antibodies in weeks that would usually take years to show up.

Now, in a study published Friday (May 17) in the journal Cell, scientists have demonstrated that this feat is possible in humans.

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"We're gathering proof of concept that a vaccine could be made can be made," Haynes told Live Science. "We're having to coax the immune system, to guide the immune system in a way we've never had to do."

In the trial, the researchers targeted a protein embedded in HIV's envelope specifically, part of the protein called the membrane proximal external region (MPER). The coveted antibodies that target MPER bind to both the backbone of this protein and to the fatty membrane it's embedded within.

"These are very unusual because they bind two things at once," Haynes said, and this makes the antibodies oddly shaped. To make antibodies of the right shape, immune cells must pick up genetic mutations over time, following exposure to a pathogen. But for reasons not fully understood, the mutations required to make antibodies against MPER and similar targets happen only very rarely.

The idea behind the new vaccine is to make these mutations more probable by exposing the immune system to a series of reaction-triggering substances. These substances, or immunogens, contain short snippets of protein and bubbles of fat. "What we're learning to do is design immunogens that can select for these rare mutations very efficiently," Haynes said.

This strategy has been demonstrated in various animal models and early human studies that aimed for targets other than MPER. These previous studies successfully coaxed immune cells to make precursors to the final, desired antibodies but the new trial represents the first time that the end-goal antibodies have been achieved in people.

"This supports the whole concept," Hope told Live Science. "Many worry if this is possible," so the new study lends credence to this iterative HIV vaccination strategy.

The trial included 20 HIV-negative volunteers. Fifteen received two vaccine doses, spaced two months apart, while the remaining five got a third dose four months after their second. Tests showed that two doses of vaccine triggered a robust response from immune cells and kicked off the production of broadly neutralizing antibodies. The team further confirmed the presence of these antibodies in the three-dose group by closely analyzing their immune cells.

The original goal of the trial was for everyone to get four doses, but it was paused after one participant given three doses had a serious allergic reaction to a vaccine ingredient called polyethylene glycol (PEG). PEG helps to stabilize certain types of vaccines in the body, but rarely, patients can have a reaction to it. The researchers have now reformulated the vaccine without PEG and will soon test the new version.

This is just one step toward making an effective HIV vaccine, Haynes emphasized. The ideal vaccine would induce four different types of broadly neutralizing antibodies that is, anti-MPER antibodies plus three more kinds. This would help prevent HIV from escaping the vaccine's protection. In addition, the antibodies need to be made in high quantities and hang around in the body for a long time.

"It's a decent starting point and it can be built upon and combined with other people's work," Hope said of the recent trial. He added that he hopes this vaccine strategy pans out, given the potential it has shown so far. Hope has been studying HIV since the late 1980s.

"I would really like to see the end of this virus," he said. "It'll lose eventually, but I'd like to see it losing."

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In a 1st, HIV vaccine triggers rare and elusive antibodies in humans - Livescience.com

Vaccine stocks gain, Moderna and Pfizer in talks with the US on bird flu vaccines – Investing.com

May 27, 2024

(Updated - May 23, 2024 11:20 AM EDT)

Shares of Moderna (NASDAQ:) and other vaccine stocks rose on Wednesday after Australia reported its first human case of avian influenza.

Moderna gained 13.7%, Pfizer (NYSE:) rose 3.6%, BioNTech SE (NASDAQ:) jumped 11% and CureVac N.V. (CVAC) rallied 18%.

In a note to clients following the news, analysts at UBS said, "mRNA vaccines offer unprecedented speed/capabilities."

They added that while few human cases are confirmed, they note that "very little is known about the potential for human transmission and [the] broader public health risk."

UBS also noted that a "top investor inbound has been on [the] size of [the] recent stock move."

Elsewhere, Bloomberg reported that Moderna and Pfizer are in talks with the US on H5N1 bird flu vaccines.

Following the news, analysts at Jefferies put the Moderna stock move down to a flurry of events, including the Q1 beat, the short covering and unwind, the soon-to-come RSV FDA decision, ASCO PCV updates soon, and now public attention to any upside from Avian flu cases and/or any stockpile deals.

"These are all in play in the near-term while fundamentally - we're also focused on RSV approval, ACIP meeting in June and important IMS script data," said the firm.

Focusing on the avian flu cases, analysts at Jefferies said they will be watched and they reiterate that the headlines will "likely continue to impact the stock action and/or any stockpile deals may be a consideration for modest revenue contributions this year to any upside guidance impact."

Analysts at Jefferies added: "That said -- the stock action seems to already price a lot of this in on Avian flu - and more reasonably - has driven short covering - rather than any fundamental financial long-term impact."

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Vaccine stocks gain, Moderna and Pfizer in talks with the US on bird flu vaccines - Investing.com

No more tears: Vaccine patches instead of needles will make life easier for parents and children alike – American Council on Science and Health

May 27, 2024

When I was in elementary school, I remember going to the county health department before every school year. There were many other kids there, and we were all there for the same reason: shots. Like terrified, trembling puppies at the vet, we all knew what was coming and the sound of a screaming kindergartener meant that the nurse had created yet another happy customer. Next!

Now, imagine a world where this didnt have to happen. Instead of injecting your little rugrat with a needle, the nurse simply slaps a patch on their arm and sends them on their way. That world could exist right now and it would benefit not only wailing toddlers in this country but poor kids all over the globe.

Microneedles

Vaccine patches work because of a technology known as microneedles. True to their name, microneedles are tiny: 150-1500 m long, 50-250 m wide, and a tip diameter of 1-25 m. Importantly, unlike hypodermic needles, they do not penetrate far into the skin. As a result, they dont trigger pain receptors located deeper in the dermis, making their application painless.

There is a lot of buzz surrounding this new technology, but scientists still want to make sure that they work well. So far, research indicates that they do, sometimes even better than traditional needles. Still, there is more to learn, and a new study published in The Lancet aimed to be the first to test the safety and efficacy of a measles and rubella vaccine microneedle patch (MRV-MNP) in children.

The researchers enrolled 45 adults, 120 toddlers, and 120 infants from The Gambia in the study, but the infant cohort was the most interesting, as they were immunologically nave to MRV that is, they never had been vaccinated against measles and rubella. (Despite that, a few of the infants had antibodies against them at baseline, likely due to environmental exposure to the viruses.)

The results are shown in the charts below. The red bars represent infants who had received the vaccine patch plus a placebo shot, while the blue bars represent infants who had received a placebo patch plus a legit MRV shot. Both worked extremely well, as measured by the percentage of infants who were seroprotected (that is, had developed a sufficient antibody response) against the viruses at day 42 and day 180. Just over 90% of infants in each treatment group were seroprotected against measles, while 100% in each treatment group were seroprotected against rubella.

Source: Adigweme I, et al. The Lancet. 2024.

Side effects were minor, mainly limited to redness and induration (that is, hardening and thickening of the skin due to inflammation). Those side effects were largely absent from the infants who received a placebo patch. But, of course, most parents would trade a bloodcurdling scream for a minor rash. Indeed, vaccine patches should come with the slogan, No more tears. Too bad Johnson & Johnson trademarked it for its baby shampoo.

Vaccines of the future

Nobody likes getting jabbed, even adults. One study suggested that if we could get rid of needles, we would eliminate 10% of vaccine hesitancy cases. For many people, therefore, fear of vaccines is based not on the contents of the syringe but the fact that theres a syringe.

Given all their benefits, microneedle patches almost certainly will be the vaccines of the future. The biggest obstacle is finding the best way to manufacture them at scale, which will require a lot of research and trial and error. Some potentially good news is that microneedle patches can be 3D-printed. They also may not require a cold chain (a series of refrigerators), which would make it much easier to deliver them to people in isolated areas of poor countries. They also dont require a medical professional to administer them, as theres nothing particularly complicated about slapping a patch on someones arm.

Source: Adigweme I, et al. A measles and rubella vaccine microneedle patch in The Gambia: a phase 1/2, double-blind, double-dummy, randomized, active-controlled, age de-escalation trial. The Lancet. 2024;403(10439):1879-1892. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(24)00532-4

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No more tears: Vaccine patches instead of needles will make life easier for parents and children alike - American Council on Science and Health

Cardin’s push for childhood vaccinations is exactly right. – Baltimore Sun

May 27, 2024

Even as health systems continue to recover from the impacts of the pandemic, historic and steady investments in global health over the past few decades are delivering astounding returns. A new United Nations report shows that the global death rate for children under five has been halved since 2000, falling below 5 million for the first time ever.

This historic milestone can and should be celebrated but our work is far from over as 4.9 million children died before their 5th birthday in 2022, most of them from causes that could have been prevented or treated.

No child should die of a preventable disease. Thats why I support the work of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which helps protect kids from deadly diseases by promoting access to routine immunizations for measles, cholera, HPV, Ebola, and most recently malaria. Since 2000, Gavi has helped prevent 17.3 million deaths around the world (Continued U.S. investment in life-saving vaccines is essential, May 17).

I want to thank U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin for sponsoring a resolution in support of Gavi so it can continue its life-saving work and I hope to see other lawmakers follow suit. Investing in Gavi is a strong sign of this countrys commitment to global health security and helps leverage support we need from other donor countries to create a safer, healthier world for everyone.

Deidree Bennett, Rockville

The writer is a volunteer for The ONE Campaign which seeks to end extreme poverty and preventable disease by 2030.

Add your voice: Respond to this piece or other Sun content bysubmitting your own letter.

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Cardin's push for childhood vaccinations is exactly right. - Baltimore Sun

New data show the HPV vaccine prevents cancer in men, too. Why don’t more people get it? – STAT

May 25, 2024

Youd think if there were a vaccine that would prevent tens of thousands of cases of cancer a year, people would want it for themselves and for their kids.

But new data being released Thursday ahead of the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology show that just isnt the case.

The data showed that the vaccine reduced the risk of HPV-related cancers by 56% in men and 36% in women numbers that actually probably understate the efficacy of the vaccine because participants in this observational study likely got the vaccine too late to prevent all HPV infections. The data were analyzed by researchers led by Jefferson DeKloe, a research fellow at Thomas Jefferson University.

That shouldnt really be news. Its been clear since the main HPV vaccine, Gardasil, was first introduced by Merck in 2006 that it decreases the risk of both human papillomavirus infection and the precancerous lesions it causes in the cervix.

But in 1999, a researcher named Maura Gillison found that the vaccine might have another benefit. She was one of the first to document that throat cancer in men, like cervical cancer in women, was likely caused by HPV, which is usually sexually transmitted.

Data were much slower to emerge about how well the vaccine worked at preventing throat cancer, but such cancers have turned out to be a big problem. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that about 37,000 cancers are caused by HPV annually. Of these, 12,500 are oropharyngeal cancers in men and 10,500 are cancers of the cervix. More rarely, the virus causes cancers of the anus, penis, vagina, and vulva.

The data being presented at ASCO are based on the rates of HPV in a giant database of electronic health records from 90 million patients collected by TriNetX, a private company in the business of using such data to conduct observational studies. The researchers were able to compare roughly 1.7 million patients vaccinated for HPV with roughly the same number of age-matched control patients with no prior HPV vaccination. A total of 56% were female, 53% were white, 21% were Black/African American, with a mix of people of other backgrounds represented.

There are problems with this setup that actually make it tougher for the vaccine. For instance, some patients who had cervical lesions were known to get the vaccine after the lesions had shown up, and people might be getting the vaccine after they had already been infected with HPV, which takes many, many years to cause cancer. Its also possible that some people who were included in the control group somehow got the vaccine and it wasnt recorded, which would make the vaccine appear less effective.

Still, the results were dramatic. Vaccinated males had 3.4 cases of HPV-linked cancer per 100,000 patients compared to 7.5 per 100,000 unvaccinated patients. Vaccinated females had 11.5 cases per 100,000 patients compared to 15.8 per 100,000 unvaccinated patients.

We know from other studies that the vaccine can be far more effective than that when given when women are young. A recent study in Scotland found that no cases of cervical cancer were found in women who were vaccinated before they were 14 years old.

But another study being presented at ASCO found that rates of HPV vaccination in adolescents and young adults in the U.S. improved from 7.8% to 36.4% of males and from 37.7% to 49.4% of females between 2011 and March 2020 meaning most people are still not being vaccinated.

There are many reasons for this, including the rising wave of vaccine skepticism and hesitancy that was present in the U.S. even before the Covid-19 pandemic. But its a shame.

Merck did its fair share of inadvisable political jockeying when it came to launching Gardasil, and it has certainly reaped profits from selling the vaccine; sales grew 29% to $8.9 billion last year. But the story of the vaccine was also the story of a researcher, Kathrin Jansen, who pushed the vaccine through despite internal skepticism at the drugmaker. Shed later run Pfizers vaccine effort during the pandemic.

There is not really any debate, at this point, that this vaccine would prevent tens of thousands of cases of cancer a year if it were used more widely. Its a miraculous product, and we should be using it.

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New data show the HPV vaccine prevents cancer in men, too. Why don't more people get it? - STAT

Why Vaccine Stocks Rallied This Week – The Motley Fool

May 25, 2024

A bird flu outbreak could spur demand for vaccines from these key players, but is it likely?

Shares of vaccine stocks Moderna (MRNA 1.58%), Novavax (NVAX 2.31%), and BioNTech SE (BNTX -2.07%) rallied this week, appreciating 23.4%, 16.4%, and 9.3%, respectively, through Thursday trading, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.

While these three stocks gained notoriety back in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, it appears this week's detection of avian bird flu in a second U.S. citizen and the first-ever detection of avian flu in a human in Australia are spurring fears of an outbreak and thus a possible boon for companies that can quickly produce a bird flu vaccine.

A new avian flu, H5N1, was detected in cattle back in March, with one worker in Texas coming down with associated conjunctivitis at that time. But on Wednesday this week, a second U.S. dairy worker in Michigan tested positive for the avian flu as well. That same day, an Australian dairy worker also tested positive for avian flu, marking the first-ever human case of avian flu in that country.

The discoveries spurred fears of an outbreak. That same day, the Assistant Secretary of Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services, Dawn O'Connell, noted that Moderna and Pfizer (PFE 0.66%), which partnered with BioNTech on the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine, were in talks over a potential mRNA vaccine program for the new avian flu.

Unlike the COVID-19 pandemic, when the U.S. government subsidized private companies to make the COVID-19 vaccine, the government actually has a stockpile of H5N1 virus candidates that could be used to make vaccines. If used, the resulting shots would actually be a government vaccine, although the government would hire private companies to help manufacture the drug. However, federal officials have said the government would only be able to supply 135 million doses, and every person would require two shots. So, that would only vaccinate about 68 million out of 330 million people.

Avian flu detection spurred the stocks of vaccine-makers this week. Image source: Getty Images.

Therefore, the government appears to be looking for ways to supplement its supply should the current bird flu become highly transmissible between humans. In a response to Barron's Magazine, Moderna confirmed that it was already in a Phase II study for an avian flu that's in the same family as the H5N1 strain.

While Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech are currently in talks with the government, Novavax also confirmed earlier in the month that it's currently conducting a pre-clinical study for an avian flu shot. Novavax has its own unique "nano-particle" protein-based approach to vaccines that's different from Moderna and BioNTech and has attempted to advertise its COVID shots as having fewer harsh side effects than the others, even though it was later to market than Moderna and BioNTech.

Furthermore, the company just inked a landmark partnership and licensing deal with French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi earlier this month, which agreed to license Novavax's technology. Of note, Sanofi already manufactures "regular" flu shots, so their combined efforts may also yield something for avian flu.

Unfortunately for the vaccine makers, but fortunately for the rest of us, it's still a low probability that avian flu will cause a genuine widespread outbreak. While people have been fearing for years that avian flu could jump to humans and then spread easily between humans, thus far, the positive cases only appear to be in dairy workers directly exposed to infected cattle.

While avian flu could potentially mutate into a human-transmissible disease, it appears the stock moves across these vaccine developers this week may be a tad premature.

Billy Duberstein has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. His clients may own shares of the companies mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Pfizer. The Motley Fool recommends BioNTech Se and Moderna. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Why Vaccine Stocks Rallied This Week - The Motley Fool

Vaccine Stocks Rise on Growing Threat of Bird Flu Infections – Yahoo Finance

May 25, 2024

Shares of several vaccine makers soared after reports suggest that the Biden administration is in discussions with Moderna MRNA and Pfizer PFE to set up a possible vaccine program aimed at preventing the spread of the H5N1 virus, also known as bird flu, in humans.

These reports came to light after the discovery of two cases of H5N1 virus in dairy farm workers in Texas and Michigan this year. Both these workers experienced symptoms in the eye after coming into contact with dairy cows infected with the H5N1 virus.

Though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) stated that the risk to the general public remains low, due to lack of evidence of human-to-human transmission. However, the regulatory body remains vigilant and is even using its flu surveillance systems to monitor for H5N1 activity.

Per the latest CDC data, nine states have confirmed bird flu cases in cows, with 52 dairy herds affected.

In response to the reports, shares of Moderna, Pfizer, Novavax NVAX, CureVac CVAC and BioNTech rose 13.7%, 3.6%, 5.3%, 18.8% and 11.1%, respectively, on Wednesday.

Some vaccine makers mentioned above are already developing a vaccine for bird flu. An article from Barrons reported that Moderna is evaluating its bird flu vaccine in a mid-stage study.

Earlier this month, Novavax mentioned that it is conducting pre-clinical studies on a vaccine for H5N1 bird flu. NVAX claimed that this vaccine uses a new approach for immunizing against the virus.

Last month, CureVac announced that it has started a phase I/II study on its bird flu vaccine. CureVac is developing this investigational mRNA-based vaccine in collaboration with GSK.

The signs of a potential bird flu transmission have provided some respite to these vaccine-focused stocks, especially for those involved in the COVID-19 vaccine roll-out. Vaccine makers, especially Moderna and Pfizer, have been suffering a heavy beatdown in product sales and market value as COVID-19 cases have significantly dropped compared with the last couple of years. Investors are counting on these companies to lead the fight against the next pandemic if one does arise.

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Vaccine Stocks Rise on Growing Threat of Bird Flu Infections - Yahoo Finance

HHS advances plan to produce 4.8 million H5N1 vaccine doses – University of Minnesota Twin Cities

May 25, 2024

CDC / Stephanie Rossow

A surveillancestudy found that carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) infections occur less frequently than extended-spectrum beta-lactamaseproducing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E) infections in US children, researchers reported today in Emerging Infectious Diseases.

Led by researchers with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Emerging Infections Program (EIP), the surveillance study analyzed CRE incidence in children in 10 states from 2016 through 2020 and ESBL-E incidence in children in six states from 2019 through 2020. While most US studies have focused on the prevalence and epidemiology of these multidrug-resistant pathogens in adults, nationwide data on children are lacking.

From 2016 through 2020, a total of 159 incident CRE cases were identified in 142 children (median age, 5 years). Most CRE isolates were from urine (82.4%), and the most commonly reported infection type was lower urinary tract infection (UTI, 56.3%). The overall annual CRE incidence rate across the 10 EIP sites was 0.70 cases per 100,000 children.

From 2019 through 2020, 207 incident ESBL-E cases were identified in 184 children, with 94.7% of isolates found in urine and UTIs accounting for 74% of cases. The overall annual ESBL-E incidence rate was 23.08. CRE and ESBL-E incidence rates were more than two-fold higher in infants than in other age-groups and were nearly always higher for girls than boys, except in the youngest age-group.

Most CRE and ESBL-E cases were healthcare-associated community-onset (43.0% for CRE vs 23.7% for ESBL-E) or community-associated (27.2% for CRE vs 64.5% for ESBL-E). A greater proportion of children with CRE than ESBL-E underwent acute care hospitalization (46.8% vs 22.5%) or surgery (38.6% vs 9.5%) within 1 year before specimen collection, while ESBL-E cases were significantly more likely than CRE cases to have no reported healthcare exposures (65.1% vs 27.2%).

The study authors say the increasing prevalence of community-associated ESBL-E UTIs mirrors trends observed in adult patients and highlights the need to monitor pediatric populations for these pathogens.

"Continued implementation of national programs to detect, prevent, and treat multidrug-resistant infections must increasingly include pediatric populations and outpatient settings," they wrote.

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HHS advances plan to produce 4.8 million H5N1 vaccine doses - University of Minnesota Twin Cities

HPV shot prevents cancer in men, too, study being presented in Chicago finds – Chicago Sun-Times

May 25, 2024

New research suggests that the HPV vaccine prevents cancer in men as well as in women, but fewer boys than girls are getting the shots in the United States.

The studies released by the American Society of Clinical Oncology will be presented in Chicago at the organizations yearly meeting, which will bring 40,000 doctors to McCormick Place starting Thursday for one of the biggest medical conferences in the world.

The shot for HPV the human papillomavirus was developed to prevent cervical cancer in women. Experts credit the vaccine, sold under the brand name Gardasil, and improved screening with lowering cervical cancer rates.

Its taken longer to document that the shots prevent HPV-related cancers in men, too. But the new research suggests that vaccinated men have fewer cancers of the mouth and throat compared to those who didnt get the shots. These cancers are more than twice as common among men as in women.

In the United States, the HPV vaccine has been recommended since 2006 for girls 11 or 12 years old and since 2011 for boys the same age. Catch-up shots are recommended for anyone up to 26 years old who hasnt been vaccinated.

Parents of boys not just girls should know that HPV vaccines lower cancer risk, says Jasmin Tiro of the University of Chicago Medicine Comprehensive Cancer Center, who wasnt involved in the research.

And young men who havent been vaccinated can still get the shots, she says: Its really important that teenagers get exposed to the vaccine before theyre exposed to the virus, she says.

Jasmin Tiro of the University of Chicago Medicine Comprehensive Cancer Center on the HPV vaccine: Its really important that teenagers get exposed to the vaccine before theyre exposed to the virus.

For the new research, scientists compared information on 3.4 million people of similar ages half of them vaccinated versus half unvaccinated from a large health care dataset.

As expected, the vaccinated women had a lower risk of developing cervical cancer within at least five years of having gotten the shots.

For men, there were benefits, too. Vaccinated men had a lower risk of developing any HPV-related cancer, including cancers of the anus, penis and mouth and throat.

These cancers take years to develop, so the numbers were low. There were 57 HPV-related cancers among the unvaccinated men mostly head and neck cancers compared to 26 among the men who had gotten the HPV vaccine.

We think the maximum benefit from the vaccine will actually happen in the next two or three decades, says Dr. Joseph Curry, a co-author of the study, who is a head and neck surgeon at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center in Philadelphia. What were showing here is an early wave of effect.

A second study published by the oncologists organization thats also being presented at the ASCO conference found vaccination rates rising but with the numbers of boys and young men lagging behind girls and young women in getting the HPV shots.

Dr. Danh Nguyen of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, co-author of a new study: More boys and young men are being vaccinated against HPV, but the numbers are still far fewer than the number of girls and young women who get the shot.

HPV is very common and is spread through sex. Most HPV infections cause no symptoms and clear up without treatment. But others develop into one of several types of cancer causing about 37,000 cases a year, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For the second study, the researchers looked at self- and parent-reported HPV vaccination rates among preteens and young adults in a large government survey. From 2011 to 2020, the number of those vaccination rates among female patients rose from 38% to 49% and among male patients from 8% to 36%.

HPV vaccine uptake among young males increased by more than fourfold over the last decade, though vaccination rates among young males still fall behind females, says Dr. Danh Nguyen of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, who was a co-author of the study.

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HPV shot prevents cancer in men, too, study being presented in Chicago finds - Chicago Sun-Times

Extreme weather. A lack of lifesaving vaccines. Africa’s cholera crisis is worse than ever – The Associated Press

May 25, 2024

LILANDA, Zambia (AP) Extreme weather events have hit parts of Africa relentlessly in the last three years, with tropical storms, floods and drought causing crises of hunger and displacement. They leave another deadly threat behind them: some of the continents worst outbreaks of cholera.

In southern and East Africa, more than 6,000 people have died and nearly 350,000 cases have been reported since a series of cholera outbreaks began in late 2021.

Children fetch water using a wheelbarrow in Lilanda township in Lusaka, Zambia, Saturday March 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

Malawi and Zambia have had their worst outbreaks on record. Zimbabwe has had multiple waves. Mozambique, Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia also have been badly affected.

All have experienced floods or drought in some cases, both and health authorities, scientists and aid agencies say the unprecedented surge of the water-borne bacterial infection in Africa is the newest example of how extreme weather is playing a role in driving disease outbreaks.

The outbreaks are getting much larger because the extreme climate events are getting much more common, said Tulio de Oliveira, a South Africa-based scientist who studies diseases in the developing world.

A young girl fetches water from a well in Lilanda township in Lusaka, Zambia, Saturday March 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

De Oliveira, who led a team that identified new coronavirus variants during the COVID-19 pandemic, said southern Africas latest outbreaks can be traced to the cyclones and floods that hit Malawi in late 2021 and early 2022, carrying the cholera bacteria to areas it doesnt normally reach.

Zimbabwe and Zambia have seen cases rise as they wrestle with severe droughts and people rely on less safe sources of water in their desperation like boreholes, shallow wells and rivers, which can all be contaminated. Days after the deadly flooding in Kenya and other parts of East Africa this month, cholera cases appeared.

The World Health Organization calls cholera a disease of poverty, as it thrives where there is poor sanitation and a lack of clean water. Africa has had eight times as many deaths this year as the Middle East, the second-most affected region.

A nurse exits from a cholera treatment centre in Lusaka, Zambia, Saturday, March 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

Historically vulnerable, Africa is even more at risk as it faces the worst impacts of climate change as well as the effect of the El Nio weather phenomenon, health experts say.

In whats become a perfect storm, theres also a global shortage of cholera vaccines, which are needed only in poorer countries.

It doesnt affect countries with resources, said Dr. Daniela Garone, the international medical coordinator for Doctors Without Borders, also known by its French acronym MSF. So, it doesnt bring the resources.

Billions of dollars have been invested into other diseases that predominantly affect the worlds most vulnerable, like polio and tuberculosis, largely because those diseases are highly contagious and could cause outbreaks even in rich countries. But thats not the case with cholera, where epidemics remain contained.

WHO said this month there is a critical shortage of oral cholera vaccines in the global stockpile. Since the start of 2023, 15 countries the desperate few have requested a total of 82 million doses to deal with deadly outbreaks while only 46 million doses were available.

There are just 3.2 million doses left, below the target of having at least 5 million in reserve. While there are currently cholera epidemics in the Middle East, the Americas and Southeast Asia, Africa is by far the worst-affected region.

Vaccines alliance GAVI and UNICEF said last month that the approval of a new cholera vaccine would boost stocks. But the result of the shortage has already been measured in deaths.

Lilanda, a township on the edge of the Zambian capital of Lusaka, is a typical cholera hot spot. Stagnant pools of water dot the dirt roads. Clean water is like gold dust. Here, over two awful days in January, Mildred Banda saw her 1-year-old son die from cholera and rushed to save the life of her teenage daughter.

Children play near stagnant pools of water in Lilanda township in Lusaka, Zambia, Saturday March 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

Cholera shouldnt be killing anyone. The disease is easily treated and easily prevented and the vaccines are relatively simple to produce.

That didnt help Bandas son, Ndanji.

When he fell sick with diarrhea, he was treated with an oral rehydration solution at a clinic and released. He slipped back into dehydration that night at home. Banda feels terrible guilt.

I should have noticed earlier that my son was not feeling well, she said, sitting in her tiny concrete house. I should have acted faster and taken him back to the clinic. I should have taken him back to save his life.

Because of the vaccine shortage, Zambia couldnt undertake a preventative vaccination campaign after neighboring Malawis outbreak. That should have been a warning call, said de Oliveira. Zambia only made an emergency request when its cases started mounting.

FILE - People gather on a bridge after floodwater washed away houses near Nakuru, Kenya, Tuesday, April 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga, file)

The doses that might have saved Ndanji started arriving in mid-January. He died on Jan. 6.

In Zimbabwe, a drought worsened by El Nio has seen cholera take hold in distant rural areas as well as its traditional hot spots of crowded urban neighborhoods.

Abi Kebra Belaye, MSF representative for Zimbabwe, said the southern African nation normally has around 17 hard-hit areas, mostly urban. This year, cholera spread to 62 districts as the struggle to find water heightened the risk.

This part of Africa is paying the highest price of climate change, Kebra Belaye said.

Augustine Chonyera, who hails from a cholera-prone part of the capital, Harare, was shocked when he recently visited the sparsely populated rural district of Buhera.

FILE - A family uses a boat after fleeing floodwaters that wreaked havoc in the Githurai area of Nairobi, Kenya, April 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Patrick Ngugi, File)

He said he heard grim tales of the impact of the disease: a family losing five members, a husband and wife dying within hours of each other and local businesses using delivery trucks to take the sick to a clinic several kilometers (miles) away.

It seems now the people in rural areas are in more danger than us. I still wonder how it happened, Chonyera said.

He said he returned home as soon as he could after giving a large bottle of treated water he had brought with him to an elderly woman.

Mutsaka reported from Harare, Zimbabwe. Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa.

The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APs standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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Extreme weather. A lack of lifesaving vaccines. Africa's cholera crisis is worse than ever - The Associated Press

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