Vaccines on horizon for AIDS, Alzheimer's, herpes
Posted on Thu, Nov 19, 2009 @ 08:40 AM
Source: AP Associated Press
MARIETTA, Pa. — Malaria. Tuberculosis. Alzheimer's disease. AIDS.
Pandemic flu. Genital herpes. Urinary tract infections. Grass
allergies. Traveler's diarrhea. You name it, the pharmaceutical
industry is working on a vaccine to prevent it.
Many could be on the market in five years or less.
Contrast
that with five years ago, when so many companies had abandoned the
vaccine business that half the U.S. supply of flu shots was lost
because of factory contamination at one of the two manufacturers left.
Vaccines
are no longer a sleepy, low-profit niche in a booming drug industry.
Today, they're starting to give ailing pharmaceutical makers a shot in
the arm.
The lure of big profits, advances in technology and
growing government support has been drawing in new companies, from
nascent biotechs to Johnson & Johnson. That means recent remarkable
strides in overcoming dreaded diseases and annoying afflictions likely
will continue.
"Even if a small portion of everything that's
going on now is successful in the next 10 years, you put that together
with the last 10 years (and) it's going to be characterized as a golden
era," says Emilio Emini, Pfizer Inc.'s head of vaccine research.
Vaccines
now are viewed as a crucial path to growth, as drugmakers look for ways
to bolster slowing prescription medicine sales amid intensifying
generic competition and government pressure to cut down prices under
the federal health overhaul. Read more here.