British scientists have developed a vaccine to control
high blood pressure, which currently affects a third of all
adults
High blood pressure, which affects a third of all adults, doubles
the risk of dying from heart disease or stroke and is blamed for
60,000 deaths a year in Britain.
It is currently treated with pills, but they can cause
side-effects and some patients simply stop taking them.
Now the Cheshire-based drug firm Protherics says its vaccine will
make it much easier for people to control their blood pressure.
"Improving compliance in this way could save thousands from
life-threatening complications such as heart attack or stroke," said
the company's Dr Andrew Heath.
The jab, which has been successfully tested on people, uses the
limpet protein to attack a hormone called angiotensin, which is
produced by the liver.
Angiotensin raises blood pressure by narrowing arteries. The
vaccine, however, turns the body's immune system against the
hormone.
Protherics is planning trials of an improved version of the jab,
which is ten times more effective at stimulating the immune system
than its original formula.
People who have tried it have suffered few side-effects, although
one in ten did complain of a brief, flu-like illness.
A successful jab would guarantee its manufacturers a healthy
share of the £12 billion spent around the world annually on blood
pressure medicines.
Ideally, patients would be given an initial course of three
injections, with a week or fortnight between each jab.
A booster shot every six months, or even once a year, would keep
blood pressure low.
The Swiss firm Cytos Biotechnology is developing a similar
vaccine which uses an empty virus shell to spur the immune system
into action.
Zurich-based Cytos, which is also developing anti-smoking,
obesity and flu vaccines, has already shown that its jab is
effective at lowering blood pressure.
But the reduction was less than that achieved by tablets already
available on prescription. Further trials are due to later this
year.
British heart doctors welcomed news of the jab, which should be
on the market within five years.
Professor Graham Mac-Gregor of the Blood Pressure Association
said: "Raised blood pressure is the most important cause of death
from strokes and heart attacks in the UK.
"If you have to take blood pressure tablets, you have to take
them for the rest of your life and some people find that difficult.
"Finding other ways and better ways of trying to lower blood
pressure without side- effects would be very much welcome."
Dr Mike Knapton of the British Heart Foundation said: "More than
one in five heart attacks in Western Europe is caused by a history
of high blood pressure. A vaccine is an interesting approach but
more research will be needed."
It is not known how much the vaccines will cost but they are not
expected to be much more expensive than current blood pressure
tablets, some of which cost just a few pence a day.
Available privately at first, the jabs will not be offered on the
NHS unless the Government's drugs rationing body, the National
Institute for Clinical Excellence, decides their benefits outweigh
the costs.
In time, the vaccine may be given to ward off problems in young
men and women with a family history of heart disease.
Some blood pressure tablets already available work by targeting
angiotensin, either by cutting production of the hormone or by
stopping it from working properly.
But many people stop taking the daily tablets simply because
there are no obvious signs that they are boosting their health.
Others give up after suffering side effects. Beta blockers, a
major type of blood pressure pill, can cause fatigue, cold hands and
feet, nausea, diarrhoea and impotence. They have also been linked to
the risk of stroke.
Last month experts from the London School of Economics warned
that the stress of modern life could be spawning an epidemic of
heart disease, with half of Britons suffering from high blood
pressure by 2025.
A growing reliance on fat and salt-laden fast food, coupled with
long working hours, is blamed for sending blood pressure soaring.
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