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Bird Flu Drug Mass Production Technique Discovered

creepygeek writes to mention a New Scientist article detailing a new process for creating Tamiflu, an antiviral drug currently thought to be our best defense against the bird flu. From the article: "Making Tamiflu is slow, partly because shikimic is hard to get, but also because one step in the process involves a highly explosive chemical called an azide. As a result, Tamiflu can be made only in small batches of a few tens of litres at a time. But Elias Corey of Harvard University - who won a Nobel prize in 1990 for chemical synthesis - and colleagues have devised a new way to make the drug from two cheap, plentiful petrochemicals, acrylate and butadiene."

12 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. Good News....right? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From TFA:
    The biggest hope for saving people at the start of a bird flu pandemic, before a vaccine is available, is the antiviral drug Tamiflu
    It's too bad that our 'biggest hope' is not up to the task, as the following articles assert:

    It might be better to just stock up on old-fashioned Jewish penicillin.
    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Good News....right? by thebdj · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Two of the three articles reference to the same write-up from the NEMJ. It is also possible, though I cannot be sure, that the third article's journal reference could be a submission from the same individual. Now, I do not know how much to trust what they say about Tamiflu still being the best option, because saying otherwise would just lead people to freak out when the pandemic comes, but I believe it would probably still be one of the better options.

      Drug resistances happen because virii and bacteria mutate over time. This is a big reason why many traditional antibiotics are becoming less useful against certain bacteria, and a possible cause for some of the "super bugs." And if your idea for fighting bird flu is with chicken soup, we truly are screwed.

      --
      "Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb."
    2. Re:Good News....right? by Pedrito · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's impossible at this point to determine how resistant the bird flu will be to Tamiflu if it becomes an easily contagious pandemic form. The reason? Because to become easily contagious, it has to mutate. When it mutates, it becomes a different virus which may be more resistant than the current strain, less resistant, or the same.

      The difference from a mutation can be enormous. For example, the current virus has about a 50% mortality rate. It is very like when that when it mutates, this mortality rate will go down. The Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918 had only a 2.5-5% mortality rate and that was without Tamiflu. That doesn't mean this one will mutate into only having a 2.5-5% rate. It will likely have a higher rate, and frankly, I think a lot of the predictions of how many will die from an H5N1 mutant pandemic are lowball figures because they do tend to assume a pretty low mortality compared to what it's currently at.

      But you're basically comparing apples and oranges at this point. A pandemic flu will not be the current strain because the current strain simply isn't contagious enough.

    3. Re:Good News....right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      On NPR the other day they were discussing the problem with mass administration of tamiflu or at least self-administration and personal stockpiling - it may reduce the effect the virus has on the person - but they will still have the virus and will be contageous. If they think they're well enough to go out into public they may cause more harm than good to the greater population.

    4. Re:Good News....right? by moro_666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      how do these articles even get posted ?


      Tamiflu, an antiviral drug currently thought to be our best defense against


      AFAIK Tamiflu doesn't Defend you from the virus, it just makes easier for the body to Fight it once you're already infected. you can still die, and if you've been illusional enough to waste your Tamiflu before you got ill the chances will be even better (since there won't be any on the market when/if it will/should ever hit in).

      There's still no birdflu here that could move from one mammal to another via air. There are lots of other viruses around that deal much greater damage at the time being, perhaps we should pay attention at them aswell ?

      ps. even if you buy a ton of tamifly, the animals that you need around for the farming industry to work, won't be protected, and if it's half as bad as it supposedly could be, you'll just die into hunger. hopefully wild animals have better protection against it than the worthless humans.

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
  2. Good news... by DaHat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If we believe the hype that the bird flu is a real threat to the health of the people of the world... which despite the hype from the media and the upcoming ABC made for tv movie... I have yet to see any credible evidence of despite much looking.

    1. Re:Good news... by mikeisme77 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Exactly. The media is always blowing something out of proportion as the next big threat to humanity (or the US):

      -Killer bees (there was a movie on this one too)
      -SARS
      -AIDs (several movies)
      -Terrorism
      -Anthrax (related to the above)
      -Small Pox coming back
      -Etc.

      While they're all threats, they aren't just going to all of a sudden just break out all over the place. The media loves to feed off our fears--as it sells almost as well as sex. When it explodes, THEN freak out about it, but until then enjoy life.

    2. Re:Good news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You can't see credible evidence despite much looking?

      Come on. You're talking to a guy who has a respectable job who's only managed to pay down about 3500 bucks of his student loans in three years. And part of that is thanks to donations. It's pretty clear that he doesn't put much effort into things.

    3. Re:Good news... by ocbwilg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sooner or later there WILL be another flu with the ability to kill millions. The only way we have of preventing another 1919 is to spot the threat before it gets going and prepare a vaccine. Hence the worry over H5N1. It's entirely possible that it will all blow over. It's also possible that it will mutate to a form that can spread from one human to another, and become pandemic. If it doesn't, well, great. If it does, we'll be glad we prepared.

      Maybe it's flu, maybe it's something else. If we spent so much hype, time, energy, and effort preparing for every possible bug that could become an epidemic or pandemic, we would never get anything done. Personally, I am far more concerned about the epidemics that we know about (HIV for example) than I am about bird flu. I think that the main reason that bird flu (which has only infected a couple dozen people and killed even fewer) gets so much press is two fold:

      1. The majority of the media-embracing public understands the concepts of birds and flu.

      2. The Bush administration is zero for two on preventing, mitigating, or responding to major US disasters (9/11 and Katrina) and they're desperate to look like they're doing something to prepare for future disasters.

  3. Biggest chance to save people? by mothlos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How about education and municipal plans to regarding epidemics? Anti-virals might be the best chance of treating those who have bird flu, but the best practice is to contain the virus early and give the medical community time to develop a real vaccine defense.

  4. Tamiflu? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is this the same Tamiflu that, out of 14 H5N1 avian flu patients who took it, just 2 survived?

  5. Mortality rates by tjwhaynes · · Score: 4, Insightful
    For example, the current virus has about a 50% mortality rate. It is very like when that when it mutates, this mortality rate will go down.

    I have problems with these mortality figures. It's very easy to determine who died from bird flu - you have a body, death certificate, medical records, etc. It is NOT easy to work out who has had the bird flu and has survived in the general populace - not all sick people will have seen a doctor and some may not even have developed symptoms. Without doing a massive study looking for bird-flu antibodies, the mortality figures are almost certainly overblown, maybe by orders of magnitude. This applies whether we are talking about the impact on birds or on humans.

    Cheers,
    Toby Haynes

    --
    Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.