Scientists Agree to Halt Work on Dangerous Bird Flu Strain
- Researchers working on the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus have
voluntarily agreed to stop their studies for 60 days over concerns that
their data could provide a bioterror threat.
- In December, scientists from two independent groups, one led by Ron
Fouchier at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands and the other by
Yoshi Kawaoke at University of Wisconsin, reported that they had successfully manipulated H5N1 — which causes serious
illness in birds, but has so far appeared to be less infectious among
humans — to make it more virulent.
- The strain the researchers created in the lab transmitted easily
among ferrets, which suggests that it would behave similarly in humans.
Although bird flu typically does not circulate well in people, it is
deadly: since the first human cases were documented in Hong Kong in
1997, H5N1 has killed nearly 60% of the 582 humans it has infected.
- Fouchier and Kawaoke had planned to publish their new findings in the journals Science and Nature
— at least until the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity
(NSABB), which oversees such research, got involved, asking the
researchers and the journal editors to suppress the data and refrain
from publishing details of how the killer version of H5N1 was made.
Passionate debate ensued. The researchers resisted NSABB’s bidding, and
many in the scientific community supported them, saying that the
scientific value of their work justified uncensored publication. Only
by fully understanding how H5N1 and other strains like it work, many
scientists say, can we hope to learn how to create more effective
treatments and vaccines against them.
- Still, Fouchier, Kawaoke and their supporters appreciate that their
findings don’t occur in a vacuum, and 39 scientists have now signed a letter
agreeing to suspend all studies on highly virulent H5N1 until
scientific, political and ethics leaders are able to discuss the
implications of these types of studies.
We recognize that we and the rest of the scientific
community need to clearly explain the benefits of this important
research and the measures taken to minimize its possible risks. We
propose to do so in an international forum in which the scientific
community comes together to discuss and debate these issues. We realize
organizations and governments around the world need time to find the
best solutions for opportunities and challenges that stem from the
work. To provide time for these discussions, we have agreed on a
voluntary pause of 60 days on any research involving highly pathogenic
avian influenza H5N1 viruses leading to the generation of viruses that
are more transmissible in mammals. In addition, no experiments with
live H5N1 or H5 HA reassortant viruses already shown to be
transmissible in ferrets will be conducted during this time.
- It’s not the first time scientists involved in controversial work
have voluntarily agreed to pause while we as a society contemplate the
implications of their findings. In 1972-73, when researchers first
succeeded in inserting genes from one species into the genome of
another, worries over the specter of genetic monsters and mutant
creatures prompted leading scientists in the field to suspend their
work while government, scientific and ethics groups figured out how the
science should proceed. Following the voluntary research stoppage, the
National Institutes of Health convened a committee to advise the
government on how to regulate research in the field responsibly,
without impinging on the forward momentum represented by the science.
The researchers met themselves, at the Asilomar Conference
in 1975, to provide their own proposals for how the work should
continue. Today, such recombinant DNA studies are the foundation of
experiments in infectious disease and cancer.
- Science is also publishing this week a series of papers
debating the merits of making public the H5N1 data. The reports include
a defense of full publication by Fouchier and by Daniel Perez, a
veterinary scientist at University of Maryland. The editors of Science
also include an argument against full disclosure, written by Michael
Osterholm, an epidemiologist and biosecurity expert at the University
of Minnesota, and Dr. Donald Henderson, an infectious disease pioneer
who led the World Health Organization’s effort to eradicate smallpox.
They argue that:
[M]aking every effort to ensure that this information
does not easily fall into the hands of those who might use it for
nefarious purposes or that a biosafety accident resulting in an
unintended release does not occur should be our first and highest
priority. We can’t unring a bell; should a highly transmissible and
virulent H5N1 influenza virus that is of human making cause a
catastrophic pandemic, whether as the result of intentional or
unintentional release, the world will hold life sciences accountable
for what it did or did not do to minimize that risk.
- In proposing the temporary moratorium, Fouchier, Kawaoke and their
colleagues say “more research is needed to determine how influenza
viruses in nature become human pandemic threats, so that they can be
contained before they acquire the ability to transmit from human to
human, or that appropriate countermeasures can be deployed if
adaptation to humans occurs.”
- Let’s hope that 60 days is enough to determine how to allow these types of studies to continue. ~TIME.
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