theatlantic | On Saturday, we saw images of Brantly's heroic return to U.S. soil,
walking with minimal assistance from an ambulance into an isolation unit
at Emory University Hospital.
"One of the doctors called it 'miraculous,'" Dr. Sanjay Gupta
reported from Emory this morning, of Brantly's turnaround within hours
of receiving a treatment delivered from the U.S. National Institutes of
Health. "Not a term we scientists like to throw around."
"The outbreak is moving faster than our efforts to control it," Dr. Margaret Chan, director of the World Health Organization, said
on Friday in a plea for international help containing the virus. "If
the situation continues to deteriorate, the consequences can be
catastrophic in terms of lost lives, but also severe socioeconomic
disruption and a high risk of spread to other countries."
In that light, and because Ebola is notoriously incurable (and the strain at large its most lethal),
it is overwhelming to hear that "Secret Serum Likely Saved Ebola
Patients," as we do this morning from Gupta's every-20-minute CNN
reports. He writes:
Three top secret, experimental vials stored at subzero temperatures were flown into Liberia last week in a last-ditch effort to save two American missionary workers [Drs. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol] who had contracted Ebola, according to a source familiar with details of the treatment.
Brantly had been working for the Christian aid organization
Samaritan's Purse as medical director of the Ebola Consolidation Case
Management Center in Monrovia, Liberia. The group yesterday confirmed
that he received a dose of an experimental serum before leaving the
country.
In Gupta's optimistic assessment, Brantly's "near complete recovery"
began within hours of receiving the treatment that "likely saved his
life." Writebol is also reportedly improved since receiving the
treatment, known as zMapp. But to say that it was a secret implies a
frigid American exceptionalism; that the people of West Africa are dying
in droves while a classified cure lies in wait.
The "top-secret serum" is a monoclonal antibody. Administration of
monoclonal antibodies is an increasingly common but time-tested approach
to eradicating interlopers in the human body. In a basic monoclonal
antibody paradigm, scientists infect an animal (in this case mice) with a
disease, the mice mount an immune response (antibodies to fight the
disease), and then the scientists harvest those antibodies and give them
to infected humans. It's an especially promising area in cancer
treatment.
In this case, the proprietary blend of three monoclonal antibodies
known as zMapp had never been tested in humans. It had previously been
tested in eight monkeys with Ebola who survived—though all received
treatment within 48 hours of being infected. A monkey treated outside of
that exposure window did not survive. That means very little is known
about the safety and effectiveness of this treatment—so little that
outside of extreme circumstances like this, it would not be legal to
use. Gupta speculates that the FDA may have allowed it under the compassionate use exemption.
0 comments:
Post a Comment