2014年08月06日

ZMapp还是幸存者血清缓解了感染Ebola病毒几乎濒危的美国医生症状使其能自己走下救护车,走进Emory大学医院的?无疑的是这个美国医生的精神及当代美国医学研究仍旧走在全人类与疾病灾难斗争的最前沿。
American Ebola victims are the subjects of a
science experiment
Updated
by
In the absence of official confirmation about how the two American patients with Ebola are being treated, rumor and speculation filled the void.
First were
the
Sadly, Dr. Gupta seems to be over-promising. Here's why.
Treating Ebola with the blood of a survivor
The science behind the first alleged treatment — using the blood serum of a survivor to cure those who are suffering — is the subject of controversy in the Ebola research community, said Dr.Thomas Geisbert, a professor or microbiology and immunology at the University of Texas Medical Branch.
"Back in 1995 during the large outbreak of Ebola Zaire virus in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, there were reports that convalescent serum was used from people who survived Ebola to treat people who were infected," he said.
A small case
series
Unfortunately, however,
the serum theory was
The "secret serum"
Yesterday, the "secret serum" called ZMapp emerged as the primary treatment of the Americans. This is an antibody therapy developed by several stakeholders — Mapp Biopharmaceutical, Inc. and LeafBio in San Diego, Defyrus Inc. from Toronto, the U.S. government and the Public Health Agency of Canada — to treat Ebola. It's made up of a cocktail of monoclonal antibodies, which are just lab-produced molecules that mimic the body's immune response.
To create these molecules, scientists gave mice Ebola proteins and watched the animals' immune systems respond. After identifying the antibodies that fought off the disease in mice, they created almost identical antibodies from plants for use in humans. The idea is that, when given to Ebola-infected people, the drug will boost their immune system so that they too can eliminate the virus.
But this drug has never undergone testing in people, only monkeys. The data on the efficacy of ZMapp in monkeys has never even been published.
Studies on similar
drugs are not entirely confidence inducing, either.
In
Mapp Biopharmaceuticals
is also just one of some 25 labs in seven countries working on
these antibody cocktails for Ebola, and none of them have entered
aphase
one
That
doesn't mean ZMapp isn't a promising therapy, however. It just
means the American Ebola victims are effectively undergoing a
science experiment. Even if they survive, it wasn't necessarily the
drug that saved their lives. Over 20 percent of people who get this
type of Ebola survive. To know whether the drug truly works, it
needs to be properly tested in clinical trials. And doing that will
require funding drug companies and governments may
not
Why ZMapp?
According to the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, Samaritan's Purse contacted CDC officials working in
Liberia. They asked about the status of several experimental Ebola
treatments that they had identified for possible use in the
infected American missionaries.
"CDC
officials referred them to an NIH scientist who was on the ground
in West Africa assisting with outbreak response efforts and broadly
familiar with the various experimental treatment candidates," said
an NIH spokesperson. "The scientist was able to informally answer
some questions and referred them to appropriate company contacts to
pursue their interest in obtaining experimental product."
Right now, Samaritan's Purse will not confirm why ZMapp ended up
being the chosen treatment.