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21
December, 2017
The
National
Institues of Health
Washington, DC
Restarts Funding
for Work With
Deadly Pathogens
by
Robby Berman
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"I
believe nature is the ultimate bioterrorist,” says chair of the
National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity, Samuel Stanley, “and
we need to do all we can to stay one step ahead."
Certainly
deadly pathogens on the loose have been the stuff of horrible
narratives, including books like The Hot Zone and movies such as
Contagion and Outbreak.
And
then there’s biological warfare, the deliberate weaponization and
dissemination of deadly diseases to achieve military or political
objectives.
It’s
all terrifying stuff.
This
week, in hopes of getting ahead of such threats, director Francis S.
Collins of U.S. the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has lifted
the three-year moratorium against the funding of “gain-of-function
research,” the study of potentially deadly viruses including
influenza, MERS, and SARS.
The
goal, his announcement says, it to “identify, understand, and
develop strategies and effective countermeasures against rapidly
evolving pathogens that pose a threat to public health.”
Anthrax
cells
(U.S. ARMY MEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES)
The
moratorium had originally been implemented in response to some
unnerving biocontainment errors.
In
one case, staff at the CDC was inadvertently exposed to anthrax, and
in another case, a harmless flu sample was mistakenly replaced by a
strain of the dangerous avian flu.
The
Obama administration began the moratorium, and many scientists
oppose the NIH’s new policy, alarmed that such lapses are
inevitable should humans are begin interacting with lethal pathogens
again.
Richard
Ebright of Rutgers University, for one, recently told STAT, “I am
not persuaded that the work is of greater potential benefit than
potential harm.”
Advocates
of the NIH’s action are convinced that only through further study
of these diseases can we stand a chance of defending ourselves
against the deliberate or accidental release into the population.
“The
only way to get ahead of the risk is to do the research, but in a
way that tries to minimize the risk of accidental release,” says
L. Syd M Johnson, a bioethicist at Michigan Technological University
in an email to Big Think.
The
urgency to learn more about dangerous pathogens was reinforced in
July, 2011 when a team from Erasmus University led by virologist Ron
Fouchier, and another team at the University of Wisconsin led by
Yoshihiro Kawaoka “easily” created airborne variants of deadly
avian flu.
It’s
a nasty virus that otherwise only rarely spreads between humans but
that has nonetheless killed a minimum of 386 people since 2003.
The
new airborne strain is especially dangerous, only 3% different from
the 1918 flu that killed about 50 million people.
The
outcry was immediate. According to Lord May, former U.K. chief
science advisor, “The work they are doing is absolutely crazy.
The
whole thing is exceedingly dangerous.” Ebright said simply, “This
research should not have been done. It will inevitably escape, and
within a decade.”
And
yet, says Johnson, “There was initially a lot of handwringing
about Fouchier’s research, and whether it should be published.
It
seemed to provide a blueprint for bioterrorists, showing them how to
produce a deadly, airborne avian flu virus.
But
Fouchier’s work was published five years ago, and the worst did
not happen.”
Fouchier
explained that the purpose of his work was to convince scientists
that others could find it relatively simple to weaponize such
viruses, or that the mutations could simply arise naturally.
Though
other scientists found comfort in their present low communicability,
Fouchier told New York Times, “I wasn’t convinced.
"To
prove these guys wrong, we needed to make a virus that is
transmissible.”
Harvard’s
Marc Lipsitch tells STAT, "A human is better at spreading
viruses than an aerosol.
"The
engineering is not what I'm worried about. Accident after accident
has been the result of human mistakes."
Still,
he agrees with the NIH that newly strengthened handling guidelines
can ensure safety, with researchers seeking to study pathogens
having to prove that their labs are secure.
“We
see this as a rigorous policy,” Collins tells the Times.
Safety
training (U.S. FOOD & DRUG ADMINISTRATION)
“The
new NIH policy allows the agency to resume funding of research
involving ‘Potential Pandemic Pathogens,’” says Johnson.
“It’s
not like no one has been doing research on these pathogens — the
scientists of the world are not beholden to the NIH."
"And
importantly, viruses mutate all by themselves in nature, which is
how avian flu occasionally jumps into humans already."
"It’s
just a matter of time before the next deadly pandemic emerges."
"Does
the US want its scientists working on this research?"
"Given
the potential threat of these pathogens, and of deadly discoveries
falling into the wrong hands, I think we do.”
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