LONDON, November 18 /PRNewswire/ -- Use of Roche's highly-publicised antiviral drug against influenza,
Tamiflu (oseltamivir) may not be the only or best way to control the expected
coming 'flu pandemic, according to a new report on the disease published by
Informa Healthcare. Vaccination and rapid diagnosis will also have an
important role to play, and there is also no guarantee as yet that Tamiflu
will prove effective against a pandemic strain, the report says.
National governments are placing multi-billion dollar orders for
stockpiles of Roche's Tamiflu. Consumers have been logging on to internet
pharmacies in droves to buy supplies of the drug, even though they could be
counterfeit. The UK police force has developed contingency plans for dealing
with riots outside pharmacies as people struggle to get hold of it. But are
we putting too much faith in Roche's Tamiflu to limit the impact of the
impending flu pandemic?
Governments need to take a wider view of the issue and look at
diagnostics and preventative therapies if they are truly going to contain the
spread of the virus. The report, entitled Dealing with the Flu Pandemic,
reveals that there is indeed a much wider arsenal of products being developed
to respond to the growing threat of avian flu, including vaccines, rapid
diagnostic tests and additional antiviral treatments.
Are governments right to focus on using Tamiflu?
Mass vaccination with existing vaccines could minimise the risk of the
avian flu virus mutating and causing a pandemic. However, up to now there has
been relatively weak demand for vaccines and drug firms have only produced
enough to cover government orders for high risk groups. As a result, we now
do not currently have the capacity to produce additional stocks quickly.
Given this uncertainty, governments have chosen to build stockpiles of
antiviral drugs that can be administered once a pandemic is underway.
However, scientists do not yet know whether Tamiflu is effective against
the H5N1 strain. And even if it is, Tamiflu can only cut the duration of
illness if is properly administered within 48 hours of its onset.
What are the options?
Once a pandemic is in full swing, it is expected that antivirals would be
administered to anyone with a confirmed case of viral infection. But as
symptoms vary from person to person and no rapid diagnostic tests are
available yet, this is not an option.
The risk of the pandemic and the potential US $70 million market for this
flu season means that a dozen companies, including Quidel, BD Diagnostics and
Thermo Biostar, have diagnostics in development and are racing to market a
universal test. But even if successful, a test's launch will necessarily be
delayed until we know what the new pandemic strain looks like.
Vaccination against the pandemic strain is another option. Informa
Healthcare's Pharmaprojects database lists 48 products currently in
development for preventing influenza. Of these, 11 are specifically under
development for preventing H5N1. But again, such a vaccine can go into
production only after the strain is known.
To be published in December, Dealing with the Flu Pandemic discusses the
products under development and other strategies for dealing with 'flu. It is
available from Scrip Reports, priced GBP695 (EUR1,077/$1,460/Yen166,800). For
more information, contact Vanessa Cheung on Tel: +44-207-017-6980
About Scrip Reports
Scrip Reports, a division of Informa Healthcare, is a leading business
intelligence on the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Our reports
cover a wide range of issues from strategic management to pharmaceutical
research and development.
Website: http://www.scripreports.com