Efforts to rid the world of the devastating effects of the Ebola virus received major boost, Friday as San Diego-based Mapp Biopharmaceutical,announced it recorded a 100% success total cure rate when it administered experimental drug, Zmapp on infected monkeys.
Zmapp, was given to 18 of the lab monkeys infected with the deadly virus, including those suffering the fever and hemorrhaging characteristic of the disease and just hours from death
Cheering news was that even monkeys not treated until five days after infection survived. No other experimental Ebola therapy has ever shown success in primates when given that long after infection; the five days is analogous to nine to 11 days after infection in people.
There are no approved Ebola vaccines or treatments, but human safety trials will begin next week on a vaccine from GlaxoSmithKline Plc and this autumn on one from NewLink Genetics Corp.
ZMapp is a mix of three antibodies that bind to proteins on Ebola viruses and trigger the immune system to destroy them. Mapp had previously developed two different cocktails of antibodies, but they protected only 43 percent of monkeys when given as late as five days after infection.
For the current study, scientists led by Gary Kobinger of the Public Health Agency of Canada set out to identify the optimal mix of antibodies from the earlier cocktails. His team tested the antibodies in guinea pigs one at a time and in various combinations, identifying the two best performers last December.
The two graduated to tests in 12 rhesus monkeys.This spring the winner of that face-off, ZMapp, was given to another 18 infected monkeys – three doses at three-day intervals starting three, four or five days after infection.
All three untreated monkeys, in contrast, died ofEbola by day eight. With ZMapp, even advanced symptoms such as rashes, liver dysfunction and hemorrhaging disappeared, a result Kobinger called “beyond my own expectations.”
“This is an extremely encouraging result,” said David Evans, professor of virology at England’s University of Warwick, who was not involved in the study.
The success suggests that ZMapp “offers the best option” for treating Ebola, Kobinger’s team wrote, and should be tested for safety in people to enable its compassionate use “as soon as possible.”
The Ebola strain in the study is the Kikwit variant, not the Guinea strain responsible for the current outbreak. ZMapp inhibited replication of the Guinea strain in lab dishes, however, suggesting it might be broadly effective.
Mapp has no more doses of ZMapp, which is produced in the leaves of tobacco plants at Kentucky BioProcessing, a unit of Reynolds
American Inc. Greenhouses there began making more ZMapp “a couple of weeks ago, but the process takes time,” said Reynolds spokeswoman Maura Payne.
It aims to produce enough for tests necessary to seek regulatory approval of ZMapp, she said, “and we plan to begin that testing protocol by year-end.”
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed 1,552 people out of 3,069 confirmed cases, the World Health Organization said, and is on pace to infect 20,000. Neither governments nor private medical groups have been able to contain the outbreak, which WHO said will almost certainly continue into 2015.