Free Newsletter
CDC posts virus sequences in campaign for access
In a move clearly designed to put pressure on Asian countries to release the sequences of lethal H5N1 viruses, the Centers for Disease Control in the U.S. has posted some 650 flu virus sequences on a public database. That U.S. database included only the seasonal and animal viruses identified inside the U.S. The CDC wants Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and China to follow suit with public postings of their own. Indonesia recently agreed to disseminate sequencing data. So far, the sequences are held by the World Health Organization, which in turn considers the data to belong to the countries. Some of the countries say they resent the fact that if they make the sequences available, the information can be used by private drug developers to create new vaccines that can then be sold to them. Individual researchers, meanwhile, have been accused of hoarding sequencing data until they can publish their own work on the different strains of H5N1 that have appeared.
- here's the article on bird flu from The New York Times
PLUS: A group of top flu experts have joined to call for the creation of a new database on bird flu that would promote research efforts everywhere. Article (WSJ sub. req.)
Paid Research Reports
- The Specialty Pharma Market Outlook: Key players, new company growth models and emerging opportunities
- Investigating Clinical Trial Costs: Comparative analysis of trial cost components in key geographies
- Clinical Trial Recruitment Strategies: Optimizing patient recruitment and retention in late stage clinical trials
- Pipeline Insight: Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines - Prospect of first approval set to reinvigorate interest from major companies
- Stakeholder Opinions: Vaccines in Emerging Markets (Asia) - Opportunities in China, India, South Korea and Taiwan
- Big Pharma Performance Before, During and Beyond the Global Recession





SHARE
WITH: