WHO seeks Mpox vaccine production surge
The World Health Organization on Friday urged manufacturers
to ramp up production of mpox vaccines to rein in the spread of a more
dangerous strain of the virus.
The WHO on Wednesday declared the mpox surge a public health
emergency of international concern -- its highest alert level -- with Clade 1b
cases soaring in the Democratic Republic of Congo and spreading beyond its
borders.
"We do need the manufacturers to really scale up so
that we've got access to many, many more vaccines," WHO spokeswoman
Margaret Harris told reporters.
The WHO is asking countries with mpox vaccine stockpiles to
donate them to countries with ongoing outbreaks.
Two mpox vaccines have been used in recent years -- MVA-BN,
produced by Danish drugmaker Bavarian Nordic, and Japan's LC16.
Harris said there were 500,000 MVA-BN doses in stock, while
an additional 2.4 million doses could be produced quickly, if there was a
commitment from buyers.
For 2025, an additional 10 million doses could be produced,
upon a firm procurement request.
"LC16 is a vaccine that is not commercialised but
produced on behalf of the government of Japan. There is a considerable
stockpile of this vaccine," Harris added, saying the WHO was working with
Tokyo to facilitate donations.
The Doctors Without Borders charity said countries with
vaccine stockpiles but no outbreaks "must donate as many doses as
possible" to affected countries in Africa.
It urged Bavarian Nordic to lower its prices, saying MVA-BN
was out of reach for most countries where mpox is a threat.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies, the world's largest humanitarian network, said it faced significant
challenges tackling mpox.
Bronwyn Nichol, IFRC senior public health emergencies
officer, said most vaccine stocks were in wealthy nations, and those sent
to Africa so far were "a drop in the bucket".
"There is a critical shortage of testing, treatment,
and vaccines across the continent. These shortages are severely hampering the
ability to contain the outbreak," she said.
The WHO, headed by Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, is due to
issue temporary recommendations to countries on handling the mpox surge.
There are two subtypes of the virus: the more virulent and
deadlier Clade 1, endemic in the Congo Basin in central Africa; and Clade 2,
endemic in West Africa.
The upsurge in the DRC is being driven by outbreaks of two
different Clade 1 strains, Tedros told a meeting Thursday of the UN health
agency's Standing Committee on Health Emergency Prevention, Preparedness and
Response.
The first is an outbreak in northwest DRC of what was
previously known as Clade 1, now called Clade 1a. This outbreak is primarily
affecting children and is spread through multiple modes of transmission, he
said.
The second in northeastern DRC is a new offshoot of Clade 1
called Clade 1b, which was first detected in September last year and is
spreading rapidly, mainly through sexual transmission among adults.
The spread of Clade 1b, and its detection in neighbouring
countries, were the main reasons behind the WHO sounding its highest alarm.
"It's a complex picture, and responding to each of
these outbreaks, and bringing them under control, will require a complex,
comprehensive and coordinated international response," said Tedros.
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