Technology Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedAntibody warfare: vaccine halts microbes in dialysis patients - Science news: this week - vaccine against bacterium Staphylococcus aureus - Brief Article
Science News, Feb 16, 2002 by N. Seppa
By inducing the immune system to do a job that antibiotics sometimes can't, scientists have found a way to fend off a microbe that causes deadly blood infections.
The researchers fashioned a vaccine against the troublesome bacterium Staphylococcus aureus by packaging two of the microbe's own carbohydrate molecules with a protein that the immune system recognizes as foreign. This generates enough antibodies to defend against S. aureus in many kidney-dialysis patients, who are susceptible to staph infections, researchers report in the Feb. 14 New England Journal of Medicine.
Most RecentTechnology Articles
- Verizon, AT&T To Limit Bandwidth; They Don't Understand Customers
- A Terrible Year for Shapiro of CEA Looks Good to Auto Industry
- Amazon Must Kill the Kindle, and Other E-Book Reader Developments
- Panasonic Bets on Video Meets at Consumer Electronics Show
- AT&T Plans Its Own iPhone Jailbreak by Selling Android, Palm Smartphones
- More »
Roughly one-fourth of all people at any given moment have S. aureus in or on their bodies. In most cases, the immune system or antibiotics kill off the bacteria. But by a Darwinian selection process, S. aureus strains that survive in hospitals and nursing homes--where many people are on long-term antibiotics--often become resistant to drugs.
In the first large trial of a vaccine against S. aureus in people, the researchers vaccinated roughly half of 1,798 dialysis patients. Such people are vulnerable to staph infections because their kidneys don't clear waste products from the blood efficiently and because they have shunts. These devices--installed through the skin to allow blood to flow in and out during dialysis--increase the risk of infection, says study coauthor Ali I. Fattom of Nabi, a pharmaceutical company in Rockville, Md.
In the trial, he and his colleagues found that only 11 of 892 dialysis patients had S. aureus in their blood during the 40 weeks following a single injection of the vaccine, whereas 26 of 906 unvaccinated dialysis patients had a staph infection.
The staph infections that arose in vaccinated patients also developed later than in the other group, notes Naomi Balaban of the University of California, Davis. This is encouraging because it suggests that vaccination will keep dialysis patients free of infection longer, she says.
The study "represents a major advance in our prevention of staphylococcal disease," says Larry M. Baddour of the University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville. This and other antibacterial vaccines are ushering in a decade of progress against these microbes, he says.
The human immune system tends to overlook carbohydrate molecules, so Fattom and his colleagues built the vaccine by attaching the two microbial carbohydrates to an engineered version of a protein from another bacterium. The combination elicited an immune response.
Since the carbohydrate molecules are integral parts of a capsule structure that normally shields S. aureus, it's unlikely the bacterium will change in response to the vaccine and become resistant, Fattom says.
The new vaccine arrives at a time when antibiotic designers are struggling "to stay one step ahead of [drug-]resistant bacteria," says Fattom.
Despite sterilizing techniques, invasive procedures now available--such as catheters threaded through blood vessels to the heart--expose many patients to S. aureus infection, says J. John Weems of the Greenville Hospital Systems in Greenville, S.C. The vaccine may prove useful for any patient entering a hospital for elective surgery, says study coauthor John B. Robbins of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Md.
Only a thorough cost-benefit study will determine whether doctors should give the vaccine to all patients undergoing such procedures, Weems says.
Because the vaccine didn't protect all the people who got it, the researchers are now attempting to make it more potent by adding a third carbohydrate molecule from the S. aureus capsule, Fattom says.
CXO UnpluggedSmart Business interviews on BNET
Brought to you by CBS MoneyWatch.com
- Best- and Worst-Paid College Degrees
- 6 Things You Should Never Do on Twitter or Facebook
- How Much Sleep Do You Really Need?
- 6 Big Myths about Gas Mileage
- 5 Rules for Immediate Annuities
- Death in the Family: 12 Things to Do Now
- Dumbest Things You Do With Your Money
- 6 Online Networking Mistakes to Avoid
- 401(k) Mistakes to Avoid
- 5 Economic Scenarios to Keep You Up at Night
- The Real ‘Best Places to Retire’
- Best Credit Cards for You
- 12 Tough Questions to Ask Your Parents
- The Real ‘Best Colleges’
- Home Buyer Tax Credit: How to Cash In
- Why You Shouldn't Bash Cash
- 8 Phony 'Bargains' and Better Alternatives
- Danger: 3 Debit Card Scams to Avoid
- 6 Myths About Gas Mileage
- 29 Fees We Hate Most
- Quick and Easy Ways to Boost Returns
- Best Stocks to Buy Now
- Lower Your Taxes: 10 Moves to Make Now
- New Jobs: 8 Lessons from Real-Life Career Switchers
- The New Job Market: Who Wins and Who Loses?
- Health Care Reform's Public Option: Everything You Need to Know
- Volunteer Work When Unemployed: Should You Work for Free?
- Whose Recovery Is This?
- Long-Term-Care Insurance: 4 Biggest Risks to Avoid
Content provided in partnership with
Most Recent Reference Articles
Most Recent Reference Publications
Most Popular Reference Articles
- A world without nuclear weapons?
- 9 questions to ask your new lover: what you were afraid to ask, but always wanted to know
- How Tyler Perry rose from homelessness to a $5 million mansion
- Rejoice anyway - Zephaniah 3:14-20, Philippians 4:4-7 - Living by the Word - Column
- BEST HAIR SALONS in DALLAS, The



