
Zika Vaccine Proves Effective in Monkeys
WRAIR announced that their Zika purified inactivated virus vaccine succesfully prevented infection in nonhuman primates.
WRAIR Zika Vaccine
In early July, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR)
In a
Viremia in control group monkeys persisted for 6-7 days after infecton, detectable in urine, cerebrospinal fluid, colorectal secretions, and cervicovacinal secretions. Monkeys in the control group did not have differing viral loads based on the type of strain they were infected with. On the other hand, in monkeys who received the vaccine, no virus was detected in blood, urine, colorectal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, or cervicovaginal secretions. Due to low sample volume, study researchers could not test viremia in semen.
According to the authors, “All PIV vaccinated animals developed ZIKV Env-specific binding antibodies by ELISA as well as ZIKV-specific neutralizing antibodies by microneutralization (MN50) assays at week 2 following initial immunization.”
Zika Situation Update
Currently, there is
Due to the complications associated with Zika virus infection, vaccine development remains imperative. The WRAIR preclinical trial findings bring researchers one step closer to creating a Zika vaccine for humans. WRAIR will be working alongside the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Division of Microbiology and Infectious Disease and Vaccine Research Center to test ZPIV in a Phase I human trial, which is expected to start later this year.
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