| 25 Mars 2015
 
Conakry, 25 March, 2015 – The Guinean Government with the World Health  Organization (WHO) initiated the very first efficacy trial of an Ebola  vaccine this week in an affected community of the Basse-Guinée, one of  the areas where most Ebola cases are found in the country. Ring  vaccination tests of VSV-EBOV, a lead Ebola vaccine developed by the  Public Health Agency of Canada, received an excellent response from the  community in a small village in the Coyah prefecture, where the trial  team arrived on 23 March.
 
 “This landmark operation gives hope to all of us, in Guinea and in the  world, that we might soon have an effective public health tool against  Ebola, should the vaccine prove to be safe and effective,” stated the  WHO Representative in Guinea, Dr. Jean-Marie Dangou. “The start of ring  vaccination clinical testing today in Guinea is therefore one of the  most important milestones we have achieved in seeking a modern line of  defense against Ebola.”
 
 Trained medical staff, vaccines and other essential equipment were  dispatched from Conakry to Coyah to vaccinate contacts of recently  infected people who have given consent in a village of the Coyah  prefecture. Vaccinations for now will include only adults, who are most  at risk of infection, with the exception of pregnant women.
 "We are committed to ending this epidemic,” said Dr. Sakoba Keita,  National Coordinator of the Fight against Ebola in Guinea. “Combined  with control measures that we are putting in place with our partners, a  safe and effective vaccine will allow us to close this trying chapter  and start rebuilding our country."
 
 The ring vaccination strategy consists in identifying recently infected  patients and vaccinating all their contacts, thereby creating a ‘ring of  immunity’ around them to stop the virus from spreading.
 
 “This very same strategy was a key contribution to eradicating smallpox  in the 1970’s, and allows us to vaccinate all those at greatest risk,"  explained WHO Coordinator for the Guinea Vaccine Trial, Dr. Ana Maria  Henao Restrepo.
 
 Dr. Bertrand Draguez, Medical Director for the Non-governmental  Organization Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) stressed that: “The trial is  organized on a voluntary basis, and participation is confidential, free  and non-remunerated.”
 
 The Guinean Government is fully committed to the success of the vaccine  clinical trial. In a 20 March official letter addressed to all the  Mayors, Prefects and local Health Officials in Guinea, the Head of the  National Coordination Against Ebola in Guinea, Dr Sakoba Keita, asked  all local public actors for their full cooperation and support.
 A total of around 10 000 people are planned to be vaccinated in 190  rings within a six-eight week period. Volunteers will be followed for  three months. Results could be available as early as July 2015.
 
 Note to editors 
 
 About the vaccine and the vaccination strategy:
 VSV-EBOV Vaccine was developed by the Public Health Agency of Canada.  The vaccine was licensed to NewLink Genetics, and on November 24, 2014,  NewLink Genetics and Merck announced their collaboration on the vaccine.
 
 The concept of ring vaccination applied to the Guinea Ebola vaccine  clinical trial is based on vaccinating the “rings” (group of contacts of  a newly diagnosed Ebola “index case”) either immediately after  confirmation of the Ebola diagnosis of the “index case”, or three weeks  later (delayed vaccination). This strategy allows all the known contacts  to be vaccinated within a short period of time, and it constitutes an  excellent alternative to the use of a placebo. The ring vaccination  trial design was developed by an international group of experts from  Canada, France, Guinea, Norway, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United  States, and WHO. This group included Professor Donald A. Henderson, who  led the WHO smallpox eradication effort.
 
 About the partners:
 The Guinea Ebola vaccine trial is a coordinated effort among numerous  international partners. The trial is implemented under the  responsibility of the Guinean government. The World Health Organization  (WHO) is the sponsor of the study. The Government of Guinea, Doctors  without Borders / Medecins sans Frontières (MSF), Epicentre, the  Norwegian Institute of Public Health and WHO are coordinating its  implementation. The trial is funded by MSF; the Research Council of  Norway through the Norwegian Institute of Public Health; the Canadian  government through the Public Health Agency of Canada, Canadian  Institutes of Health Research, International Development Research Centre  and Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development; and WHO, with  support from the Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom.