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  • Armenian Pioneer In Virology Dies

    ARMENIAN PIONEER IN VIROLOGY DIES

    http://asbarez.com/120068/armenian-pioneer-in-virology-dies/
    Thursday, February 27th, 2014

    Dr. Albert Kapikian (middle) first identified the hepatitis A virus
    (HAV) in 1973. His groundbreaking work led to development of the
    first licensed HAV vaccine. (Photo: NIAID)

    BETHESDA, Maryland--Dr. Albert Z. Kapikian, M.D., a pioneering
    virologist at the National Institutes of Health who discovered
    norovirus and led a decades-long effort that resulted in the first
    licensed rotavirus vaccine, died on Feb. 24, 2014. He was 83 years
    old. Dr. Kapikian was the former chief of the epidemiology section
    of the Laboratory of Infectious Diseases at NIH's National Institute
    of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a position he held for
    45 years.

    "Al Kapikian was a giant in the field of virology," said NIAID Director
    Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "His seminal basic and clinical research
    contributions to the study of viruses and to vaccine development have
    had an enormous global impact. Importantly, he was a warm-hearted,
    beloved, and widely respected human being. His many friends at NIAID
    and NIH mourn the loss of their esteemed colleague."

    Dr. Albert Z. Kapikian

    Dr. Kapikian often was called the father of human gastroenteritis virus
    research for his work on improving the understanding and prevention
    of viral diseases that affect the gastrointestinal tract.

    In 1972, he identified the first norovirus, initially called Norwalk
    virus. Noroviruses are now recognized as a major cause of epidemic
    diarrhea in adults worldwide. In 1973, Dr. Kapikian and his colleagues
    identified the hepatitis A virus. He also was the first scientist in
    the United States to detect human rotavirus, which had been discovered
    by others in Australia. He dedicated himself to studying this leading
    cause of severe diarrhea in children, which accounts for more than
    400,000 deaths annually, mostly in developing countries.

    "Al was my hero," said Kathryn C. Zoon, Ph.D., director of the NIAID
    Division of Intramural Research. "He was a modest man who made many
    remarkable discoveries in virology and saved many lives through his
    vaccine development efforts. He will be missed by his NIAID family."

    Dr. Kapikian and his research group defined the mode of transmission
    of rotavirus, identified the viral proteins critical for triggering
    an immune response, and formulated a vaccine that targeted several
    important rotavirus strains. These efforts ultimately led to the
    development, testing and approval by the Food and Drug Administration
    in 1998 of the first rotavirus vaccine. Subsequently, Dr. Kapikian
    headed the development of second-generation rotavirus vaccines that
    have been licensed by pharmaceutical companies in Brazil, China, and
    India. He also contributed to ongoing efforts to improve rotavirus
    vaccines and expand their use in the developing world.

    He received his medical degree from Cornell University Medical College
    in 1956 and joined NIAID in 1957. His numerous accomplishments earned
    him the Albert B. Sabin Gold Medal, the Maurice Hilleman/Merck Award
    of the American Society for Microbiology and the Children's Vaccine
    Initiative Pasteur Award, among many other honors.

    "Al was a great scientist who worked as hard as humanly possible on
    the development of an attenuated virus vaccine for rotavirus," said
    Brian R. Murphy, M.D., former co-chief of the NIAID Laboratory of
    Infectious Diseases. "Most importantly, he was a great colleague to
    those of us lucky enough to have worked with him. He was thoughtful,
    gentle, kind, enthusiastic, encouraging and extremely intelligent. He
    was a sports enthusiast, a master of the knuckleball and a great
    father, with a loving wife, sons and grandchildren."




    From: A. Papazian
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