Recently, a girl died of rabies infection in Palakkad despite getting anti-rabies vaccination. What exactly caused her death is yet to be ascertained convincingly.

Recently, a girl died of rabies infection in Palakkad despite getting anti-rabies vaccination. What exactly caused her death is yet to be ascertained convincingly.

Recently, a girl died of rabies infection in Palakkad despite getting anti-rabies vaccination. What exactly caused her death is yet to be ascertained convincingly.

Kozhikode: The first batch of the Equine Rabies Immune Globulin (ERIG) for anti-rabies vaccination has reached Kerala even before the final test reports from the Central Drug Lab (CDL).

On Saturday morning, 16,000 vials reached the warehouses of the Kerala Medical Services Corporation Limited (KMSCL) in Thiruvananthapuram, Ernakulam and Kozhikode. The rest of the first batch of consignments would reach on 21 July.

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The vaccine supply to hospitals has commenced as soon as the early consignments landed in the warehouses. The KMSCL directed to start the supply of vaccines immediately, citing shortage in hospitals.

In all 60,500 vials will be supplied to hospitals in the first phase. The State has ordered 1.40 lakh vaccine vials in total.

Hurried despatch, CDL report awaited

Although there is a condition that the payment for the procured vaccine would be settled only after the CDL’s final report, there are no such terms for vaccine distribution.

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The relaxation of tender norms by the KMSCL is quite unusual. 

As the efficacy and safety of the vaccine have not been tested and proven completely, there are fears of adverse effects if administered. However, the KMSCL has ordered the despatch of the vaccine stocks based on mere test reports from the manufacturers and without waiting for the final CDL report on efficacy and safety.

It was recently a girl died of rabies infection in Palakkad despite getting anti-rabies vaccination. What exactly caused her death is yet to be ascertained convincingly.  

The CDL is the national control laboratory for testing and quality control of immunobiologicals (vaccines and antisera) for human use.

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Delay in placing order

While the process for the procurement of the anti-rabies vaccine drugs must have started in November and completed by March, the order was placed by the KMSCL on June 6. Had the order been placed in March, the quality checking and efficacy testing could have been done as mandated on time.

The usual process 

It takes 27 days to manufacture one batch of anti-rabies vaccines. Then, the testing at the manufacturer’s end takes another 14 days. The sample of the packaged vaccine is sent to the CDL for further testing. It is stored at the CDL’s facility for 21 days before the test commences here.

This is done to give ample time for the activation of harmful viruses in the vaccine, if at all present.

On day 30, the testing would be completed and the sample would be approved by the CDL. The vaccine manufacturers begin the supply of the vaccine only with this final report approving the vaccine’s safety and efficacy. This is why the supply takes 90 days once the order is placed for the anti-rabies vaccine.

What happened in this case

In the first stage, the anti-rabies vaccine procured by the State has only completed the 14-day testing by the manufacturer. The entire first batch of vaccines is reaching Kerala this week 40 days after its production, instead of the required 90 days.

ERIG and HRIG

ERIG is produced in horses, whereas Human Rabies Immune Globulin (HRIG) is produced in humans. Both products contain antibodies specifically made against rabies virus. Both products are produced by vaccinating horses (ERIG) or humans (HRIG) and harvesting their plasma which contains antibodies against rabies virus.