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NIAID awards Tulane University over $15M to develop Lassa fever vaccine and treatment

Published on February 10, 2010 at 1:08 AM · No Comments

The National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has awarded a five-year contract totaling $15,254,919 to Tulane University for its ongoing efforts to treat and prevent Lassa fever, an often deadly viral disease that threatens hundreds of thousands of people annually in West Africa and is classified as a potential bioterrorism threat.

The contract will include collaboration between Tulane; Scripps Research Institute; The Broad Institute; Harvard University; the University of California at San Diego; Boston University; Autoimmune Technologies, LLC; Corgenix Medical Corporation and various partners in West Africa.

Dr. James Robinson, professor of pediatrics at Tulane University School of Medicine and principal investigator of the program, said researchers plan to evaluate antibodies from patients who were infected by the Lassa virus and recovered, to see if those antibodies might play a role in the development of a vaccine or treatment for the illness.

"This study will result in a fundamental understanding of the mechanisms of antibody responses and how they neutralize the Lassa virus," Robinson said. "We have assembled a very strong and diverse group of institutions to collaborate on this project."

In some areas of Sierra Leone, up to 16 percent of people admitted to hospitals have Lassa fever. Lassa fever is also associated with occasional epidemics, during which the fatality rate can reach 50 percent.

But Dr. Robert Garry, professor of microbiology and immunology at Tulane, who serves as program manager of the contract, sees hope.

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