Two American
aid workers infected with Ebola are getting an experimental drug so
novel it has never been tested for safety in humans and was only
identified as a potential treatment earlier this year, thanks to a
longstanding research program by the U.S. government and the military.
The
workers, Nancy Writebol and Dr. Kent Brantly, are improving, although
it's impossible to know whether the treatment is the reason or they are
recovering on their own, as others who have survived Ebola have done.
Brantly is being treated at a special isolation unit at Atlanta's Emory
University Hospital, and Writebol was expected to be flown there Tuesday
in the same specially equipped plane that brought Brantly.
They
were infected while working in Liberia, one of four West African
nations dealing with the world's largest Ebola outbreak. On Monday, the
World Health Organization said the death toll had increased from 729 to
887 deaths in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Nigeria, and that more
than 1,600 people have been infected.
In
a worrisome development, the Nigerian Health Minister said a doctor who
had helped treat Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American man who died
July 25 days after arriving in Nigeria, has been confirmed to have the
deadly disease. Tests are pending for three other people who also
treated Sawyer and are showing symptoms.
There is no vaccine or specific treatment for Ebola, but several are under development.
The
experimental treatment the U.S. aid workers are getting is called ZMapp
and is made by Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc. of San Diego. It is aimed at
boosting the immune system's efforts to fight off Ebola and is made
from antibodies produced by lab animals exposed to parts of the virus.
In
a statement, the company said it was working with LeafBio of San Diego,
Defyrus Inc. of Toronto, the U.S. government and the Public Health
Agency of Canada on development of the drug, which was identified as a
possible treatment in January.
The
drug is made in tobacco plants at Kentucky BioProcessing, a subsidiary
of Reynolds American Inc., in Owensboro, Kentucky, said spokesman David
Howard. The plant "serves like a photocopier," and the drug is extracted
from the plant, he said.
Kentucky
BioProcessing complied with a request from Emory and the international
relief group Samaritan's Purse to provide a limited amount of ZMapp to
Emory, he said. Brantly works for the aid group.
The
Kentucky company is working "to increase production of ZMapp but that
process is going to take several months," Howard said. The drug has been
tested in animals and testing in humans is expected to begin later this
year.
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration must grant permission to use experimental treatments in
the United States, but the FDA does not have authority over the use of
such a drug in other countries, and the aid workers were first treated
in Liberia. An FDA spokeswoman said she could not confirm or deny FDA
granting access to any experimental therapy for the aid workers while in
the U.S.
Writebol, 59, has
been in isolation at her home in Liberia since she was diagnosed last
month. She's now walking with assistance and has regained her appetite,
said Bruce Johnson, president of SIM USA, the Charlotte, North
Carolina-based group that she works for in Africa.
Writebol
has received two doses of the experimental drug so far, but Johnson was
hesitant to credit the treatment for her improvement.
"Ebola
is a tricky virus and one day you can be up and the next day down. One
day is not indicative of the outcome," he said. But "we're grateful this
medicine was available."
Brantly,
33, also was said to be improving. Besides the experimental dose he got
in Liberia, he also received a unit of blood from a 14-year-old boy, an
Ebola survivor, who had been under his care. That seems to be aimed at
giving Brantly antibodies the boy may have made to the virus.
Samaritan's
Purse initiated the events that led to the two workers getting ZMapp,
according to a statement Monday by the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
The Boone, North Carolina-based group contacted U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention officials in Liberia to discuss various
experimental treatments and were referred to an NIH scientist in Liberia
familiar with those treatments.
The
scientist answered some questions and referred them to the companies
but was not officially representing the NIH and had no "official role in
procuring, transporting, approving, or administering the experimental
products," the statement says.
In
the meantime, dozens of African heads of state were in Washington for
the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, a three-day gathering hosted by
President Barack Obama. U.S. health officials on Monday spoke with
Guinean President Alpha Conde and senior officials from Liberia and
Sierra Leone about the Ebola outbreak.
The
Defense Department has long had a hand in researching infectious
diseases, including Ebola. During much of the Cold War period this
served two purposes: to keep abreast of diseases that could limit the
effectiveness of troops deployed abroad and to be prepared if biological
agents were used as weapons.
The
U.S. military has no biological weapons program but continues to do
research related to infectious diseases as a means of staying current on
potential threats to the health of troops. It may also contribute
medical expertise as part of interagency efforts in places like Africa
where new infectious disease threats arise.
The
hospital in Atlanta treating the aid workers has one of the nation's
most sophisticated infectious disease units. Patients are sealed off
from anyone not in protective gear. Ebola is only spread through direct
contact with an infected person's blood or other bodily fluids, not
through the air.
The CDC last
week told U.S. doctors to ask about foreign travel by patients who come
down with Ebola-like symptoms, including fever, headache, vomiting and
diarrhea. A spokesman said three people have been tested so far in the
U.S. — and all tested negative. Additionally, a New York City hospital
on Monday said a man was being tested for Ebola but he likely didn't
have it.
Writebol and her
husband, David, had been in Liberia since last August, sent there by SIM
USA and sponsored by their home congregation at Calvary Church in
Charlotte. At the clinic, Nancy Writebol's duties included disinfecting
staff entering or leaving the Ebola treatment area.
"Her
husband, David, told me Sunday her appetite has improved and she
requested one of her favorite dishes - Liberian potato soup — and
coffee," SIM's Johnson said.
___AP writers Krista Larson in Dakar, Senegal, Mike Stobbe and Stephanie Nano in New York, and Robert Burns in Washington contributed to this report
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