Hilary Koprowski Dies At 96
Dr. Hilary Koprowski has died of pneumonia Thursday at the age of 96. The virologist developed the first successful oral vaccination for polio in 1950.
While at The Wistar Institute, Koprowski created the world’s first polio vaccine, based on oral administration of attenuated polio virus. In researching a potential polio vaccine, he had focused on live viruses that were attenuated (rendered non-virulent) rather than on killed viruses (the latter became the basis for the injected vaccine that was subsequently created by Jonas Salk).
Koprowski viewed the live vaccine as more powerful, since it entered the intestinal tract directly and could provide lifelong immunity, whereas the Salk vaccine required booster shots. Also, administering a vaccine by mouth is easy, whereas an injection requires medical facilities and is more expensive. Koprowski’s vaccine was taken by the first child on February 27, 1950, and within 10 years was being used on four continents. Albert Sabin’s attenuated-live-virus polio vaccine was developed from attenuated polio virus that Sabin had received from Koprowski.
Koprowski was President of Biotechnology Foundation Laboratories, Inc., and Head of the Center for Neurovirology at Thomas Jefferson University. In 2006 he was awarded a record 50th grant from the National Institutes of Health.
He is the author or co-author of over 875 scientific papers and was co-editor of several journals. He served as a consultant to the World Health Organization and the Pan American Health Organization.