T.
LOUIS, Nov. 2 Six student volunteers became the first people to receive
smallpox vaccine here today as part of a study to determine whether existing
stockpiles of the vaccine can be stretched to protect more Americans from
bioterrorism.
"I thought this is an amazing opportunity," said Alison Hayes, a
law student at Saint Louis University. "I can be vaccinated for my own
protection and have the chance to help others should there be a smallpox
outbreak."
Ms. Hayes, 26, of University City, a St. Louis suburb, is part of a study
at the Center for Vaccine Development at Saint Louis University School of
Medicine. In two to three months, 171 people, ages ´o 32, will receive
varying strengths of the vaccine.
Smallpox, a highly contagious viral disease, was eliminated in 1980, but
some terrorism experts fear that terrorists may have stockpiles.
In the United States, routine vaccination against smallpox ended in the
1970's. The government is making plans to produce enough new vaccine to
immunize all Americans.
Meanwhile, the government wants to see if the existing 15 million doses of
the vaccine could be diluted to deal with an outbreak. The National
Institutes of Health is financing the study here and at three other
locations.
Dr. Sharon E. Frey, an associate professor and the lead investigator in
the Saint Louis University study, will inject volunteers with vaccine at
full, one-fifth or one-tenth strength.
A similar study of 60 volunteers last year showed that 95 percent of those
given full-strength vaccine were effectively immunized, compared with 70
percent of those given the one-fifth dilution. "The results with the
one-to-ten solution were disappointing," Dr. Frey said.