| Report
on a landmark conference on the origin of AIDS: Did polio vaccines
cultured in chimpanzee tissues trigger the AIDS epidemic in Africa?
The
Royal Society recently (September 11-12th) played host to an extraordinary
meeting, convened to examine the hotly disputed theory that the
AIDS epidemic was sparked by trials of oral polio vaccine (OPV)
in Africa in the 1950s. The theory claims that SIV (simian immunodeficiency
virus), a virus naturally carried by chimpanzees without ill effect,
was unwittingly passed to humans in contaminated polio vaccines
which were cultured in ground-up chimpanzee kidneys. Once in its
new host, the virus mutated into HIV (human immunodeficiency virus)
with devastating effect: 50 million people are now infected, most
of them in Africa. The evidence which first pointed to such an explanation
was the striking correlation between the earliest AIDS cases in
Africa and the sites of OPV trials in the former Belgian Congo between
1957 and 1960.
Most
scientists now believe that HIV in man was acquired from SIV in
chimpanzees; what is disputed is the manner of that acquisition:
accidental or iatrogenic (doctor-induced). It is argued that OPV
could only have been the source of the infection if the vaccine
was prepared using chimpanzee tissues - and the scientists who made
the vaccine vociferously deny this crucial point. Professor Hilary
Koprowski and Dr. Stanley Plotkin were scathing about such an accusation
and brandished sworn statements from former collaborators categorically
denying that chimpanzee kidneys were ever used in the manufacture
of their vaccine. Investigative journalist and self-taught scientist
Edward Hooper is the main proponent of the theory which he has researched
for the past ten years and which he describes in his book 'The River:
A Journey to the Source of HIV and AIDS'. He claims chimpanzee tissues
were used and that he has eye-witness evidence to prove it. He too
produced signed statements from former health workers involved in
the project, even including one from the same Belgian vet quoted
by Plotkin, saying that 'untoward approaches' had been made to former
colleagues, urging them to 'sign letters which would change the
content or emphasis of their previous testimony'. This acrimonious
impasse may never be resolved.
Smoking
gun
Many scientists
present at the meeting felt that the evidence against the OPV theory
is now sufficient to lay it to rest, including genetic dating techniques
which suggest that HIV emerged before the OPV trials, which could
not then be held responsible. Hooper does not accept this conclusion,
maintaining that this data could also be interpreted in support
of his theory. He has also recently obtained what he describes as
a 'smoking gun': testimonies that chimpanzee kidneys were indeed
used by Koprowski and that their use was to be kept secret. These
new revelations ensure the case is not yet closed and that further
investigations are warranted. They are warranted because the implications,
if the theory is correct, are enormous: that medical science may
have unwittingly ignited the global pandemic of AIDS: not an accusation
to be made or taken lightly.
If we did indeed
acquire AIDS from chimpanzees, it was unquestionably through our
exploitation of them; either for food, pets or laboratory tools,
or even through trapping, or killing them for raiding crops. There
was consensus at the meeting that the term 'cut hunter' should be
replaced by 'natural transfer' to reflect the broader scenarios
by which transmission may have occured in the mainstream theory
to which most scientists subscribe. In fact, the plentiful opportunities
for natural transfer to occur are currently giving cause for alarm
because chimpanzees and gorillas have recently been found to harbour
previously unknown herpes viruses closely related to the human virus
which causes Kaposi's sarcoma, a type of skin tumour, in man. As
the timber trade expands into new parts of the West African forest,
the loggers, roadbuilders and others start consuming local 'bushmeat',
including primates. The potential for this to cause another new
'zoonosis' (disease from another animal) is a very serious threat.
A
distinctive trigger?
There was one
other theory presented at the meeting which seems extremely plausible
and worthy of further attention and research. The idea is that the
massive use of unsterilised needles in African medicine in the twentieth
century was responsible for transmitting the virus from an infected
person to many other people, prompting the virus to become more
virulent: a process known to happen with many other pathogens, for
example hepatitis C, which was spread via unsterilised needles in
Egypt in the 1950s. The many inoculation campaigns in Africa are
a distinctive enough twentieth century phenomenon to explain why
the epidemic took off when it did and not before, given that people
have had contact with infected chimpanzees for centuries. A distinctive
trigger mechanism is rather lacking in the natural transfer theory,
which postulates that increased travel in the twentieth century
was responsible for spreading the virus to epidemic proportions.
This is rather unsatisfactory, however, in view of the slave trade,
various wars and colonial upheavals in Africa over the centuries,
which involved large movements of people but were not sufficient
to ignite an epidemic: we do need an explanation which identifies
some peculiarly twentieth century phenomenon as the culprit. If
the virus was more easily transmissible - i.e. through airborne
droplets, like a cold or flu virus - an epidemic could be spontaneous
and we would not need to invoke a trigger. BSE, on the other hand,
is not contagious enough to trigger an epidemic without assistance.
That assistance was identified as the cannibalistic recycling of
infected animal material to naturally herbivorous cattle.
One of the prominent
scientists at the meeting, Professor Albert Osterhaus, gave a chilling
presentation on newly-emerging viral diseases in man and other animals;
asserting that they all became virulent after crossing the species
barrier from another animal. He noted that the greatest causes of
death over the past century have been AIDS and the three major flu
epidemics, all of which, he affirmed, were acquired from animals.
Admitting
mistakes
Whether
they are right or wrong, proponents of iatrogenic theories of the
origin of AIDS, particularly the OPV theory, have an important point
to make about the conduct of science and its unwillingness to admit
the possibility of mistakes, even though entirely unintentional.
Establishing the cause of the AIDS epidemic is no mere academic
exercise: it could have implications for the treatment or containment
of the disease and it could certainly help us avoid similar catastrophes
in the future. We have had plenty of them in the past, including
the contamination of yellow fever vaccines with hepatitis B and
the infection of millions of people, through polio vaccines, with
SV40; a monkey virus which, the evidence suggests, has carcinogenic
effects in man.
It is therefore
disturbing that scientists and journalists, including Andrew Tyler
(he was a Fleet Street journalist for many years before becoming
Director of Animal Aid), who have written about the theory over
the past decade have been subject to censorship and ridicule.
The fact that
this meeting went ahead, despite attempts to scupper it, is a positive
sign that some scientists are willing to face potentially unpalatable
truths, although others still are not.
Koprowski has
been honoured and lauded for what the scientific community regard
as his role in the eradication of polio and clearly does not wish
to add the accolade 'father of AIDS' to his CV. His attitude of
contempt for non-scientists and their 'irresponsible fantasies'
is not helpful to his case, however. Science must demonstrate its
integrity or, according to the late Professor Bill Hamilton, co-organiser
of the conference, 'the public will be justified in its disillusionment
with science.'
A
close call
Whatever the
truth of this controversy, the Royal Society meeting was able to
conclude, categorically, that injecting any animal material into
humans is 'incredibly dangerous'; that we should exercise much more
caution in such practices; and that even if we did not bring the
AIDS epidemic upon ourselves then it was a 'close call'.
The message
we should take from this is clear: all vaccines and other biological
products for human use should be cultured in human, rather than
animal, cells or tissues; that we should not be using animals as
'living reactors'; and that the potential risks of xenotransplantation
are so enormous that it must never be allowed to happen.
My own conclusion
is that as long as we have intimate contacts with animals, we will
continue to catch deadly diseases from them; whether from farming
them, eating them, hunting them, using them as laboratory specimens,
or even trading and keeping them as pets. All of these relationships
constitute exploitation and therefore 'homogenic' may be a more
appropriate term than 'iatrogenic', ie. human-induced; meaning that
through our exploitation of other species we often bring disease
upon ourselves.
Kathy
Archibald, Animal Aid scientific researcher. |