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Vaccines: The Week in Review 27 June 2011 Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy (CVEP) http://centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.wordpress.com/ A program of - Center for Bioethics, University of Pennsylvania http://www.bioethics.upenn.edu/ - The Wistar Institute Vaccine Center http://www.wistar.org/vaccinecenter/default.html - Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Vaccine Education Center http://www.chop.edu/consumer/jsp/microsite/microsite.jsp This weekly summary targets news and events in global vaccines ethics and policy gathered from key governmental, NGO and industry sources, key journals and other sources. This summary supports ongoing initiatives of the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy, and is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. Vaccines: The Week in Review is now also posted in pdf form and as a set of blog posts at http://centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.wordpress.com/. This blog allows full-texting searching of some 1,600 items. Comments and suggestions should be directed to David R. Curry, MS Editor and Executive Director Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy [email protected] Vaccines from start to finish: harnessing our opportunity Opening remarks at the Pacific Health Summit: Dr Margaret Chan, Director-General of the World Health Organization Seattle, Washington, USA 23 June 2011 [Full text] “Immunization was on the agenda at the May World Health Assembly, which is attended by delegations from all 193 WHO member states. The immunization session covered current progress internationally and within countries, expectations for the Decade of Vaccines, and plans for WHO to develop a global vaccine action plan to guide work during the decade. Well over 50 delegations and representatives of civil society took the floor on this item. For those of you unfamiliar with the workings of Health Assemblies, this number represents an extraordinary level of interest and engagement. I think a brief summary of these interventions is a good way to give you an overview of what countries themselves see as progress and sources of pride. It also tells you some of their deep-seated concerns, right now and for the future. Many developing countries are proud of their ownership of national immunization programmes, and many have dedicated budget lines as a formal expression of this commitment. As we enter this Decade of Vaccines, we heard about great progress and high praise for support from WHO and UNICEF, but especially for the GAVI Alliance. GAVI operates according to a fundamental principle that resonates extremely well with public health thinking in general and the principles that guide the work of WHO: every child, regardless of where it is born or the wealth of its parents, deserves protection with the best that science can offer. This is an expression of fairness, and this is a principle that guides much of my own personal work. With GAVI support, vaccines that prevent pneumonia and diarrhoea, the two biggest childhood killers, are now being rolled out in a number of countries. But these new vaccines are expensive and sustainability is definitely a problem, as stressed by many speakers from the developing world. As reported, many countries have added yellow fever and hepatitis B vaccines to routine immunization programmes. We heard first-hand accounts of what the new meningitis vaccine, developed in a project coordinated by WHO and PATH, with support from the Gates Foundation, means for Africa and its people. Launch of the vaccine, which costs less than 50 cents a dose, a price demanded by African ministers of health, began last December in the three hyper-endemic countries in Africa’s notorious meningitis belt, namely Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger. By the end of that month, 19.5 million people had been vaccinated in the three countries. WHO and its partners are currently assessing the impact of these initial mass immunization campaigns, including their safety and efficacy. This is a thorough, systematic assessment, but early results look extremely promising. Epidemic meningitis is not the biggest killer in Africa, but it is one of the most greatly feared of all diseases. My staff in the field tell me that long lines for vaccination form at the first hint of an epidemic that will leave around 25% of affected children, I mean the ones that survive, permanently impaired with brain damage or profound hearing loss. For once, Africa is the first to receive the very best technology that the world, working together, can offer. Ladies and gentlemen, Delegates gave us two extremely clear messages. First, the achievement of ambitious, yet fully agreed goals, such as expanded immunization coverage, the introduction of new vaccines, polio eradication, and measles elimination, is directly tied to funds. We heard compelling pleas to fully replenish GAVI funds so that recent spectacular progress, supported by strong country ownership, does not lose its momentum. Second, expanded vaccination coverage alone will not help countries reach the MDG for reducing young child mortality. According to the latest UNICEF estimates, some 8.1 million young children died in 2009 from largely preventable causes. This figure is the lowest recorded in more than six decades. It is a measure of welcome progress, but the figure is still way too high. Immunization is thought to prevent 2 to 3 million childhood deaths each year. Vaccines are magic bullets, yes, but they don’t hit all the enemies that extinguish so many young lives. Countries reminded us of the critical role of basic primary health care measures, such as oral rehydration therapy, home-based antibiotic treatment for pneumonia, and things so straightforward, yet so difficult for the poor, as adequate nutrition and good hygiene. The issue of sustainable funding came up over and over again. As I have heard on many occasions, a vaccine that is too expensive for the developing world is worse than no vaccine at all. Many asked the international community to seek ways to reduce the costs of vaccines, especially the newer ones. Delegates from the developing world referred to the need for technology transfer and skills training to enable local manufacturing of vaccines, especially in Africa. Some described WHO’s key role in achieving exactly this objective for the local manufacturing of pandemic influenza vaccines. And what has happened since the May Assembly? On 6 June, leading drug companies announced dramatic slashes in vaccine prices for the developing world, including a 95% price cut on the new rotavirus vaccine that can prevent diarrhoeal deaths. On 13 June, donors pledged more than $4 billion to support the work of GAVI, an amount that exceeded anyone’s wildest dreams. This money will certainly hasten the introduction of new vaccines and expand vaccination campaigns in Africa’s meningitis belt, which has 25 countries. There are critics, of course. Many cite the lack of basic infrastructure for delivering vaccines and the crumbling of public health services, after years of neglect, throughout most of the developing world. But let me reassure the critics. The strengthening of health systems has moved near the top of the international health agenda. The May Health Assembly adopted no fewer than 5 resolutions setting out ways to build stronger health systems that extend affordable services to the poor. This is, after all, how health operates in the context of the MDGs, with their overarching goal of poverty reduction. By improving health, you reduce poverty. But to do so, you must reach the poor. Ladies and gentlemen, This decade of vaccines has a vision, and vision always feeds that perennial optimism of public health that keeps us going despite the many obstacles and setbacks thrown our way by policies and events beyond our control. This decade will help realize the full power of immunization to prevent morbidity and mortality. And the young lives saved from death or life-long disability will be numbered in the millions. Thank you. http://www.who.int/dg/speeches/2011/vaccines_20110623/en/index.html Sabin Vaccine Institute announced receipt of a two-year, US$12 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation “to continue development of a vaccine to prevent human hookworm infection, a parasitic disease that affects 600 million people worldwide.” Hookworm infection, most commonly found in subSaharan Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America, is a significant contributor to the global burden of iron-deficiency anemia that disproportionately affects children and women of reproductive age. The infection results in approximately 65,000 deaths and the loss of up to 22 million disability adjusted life years (DALYs) annually. Hookworm is one of the seven most common neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), which together carry a greater health burden than malaria and tuberculosis and rival that of HIV/AIDS. http://sabin.org/news-resources/releases/2011/06/22/major-funding-announcedcontinue-development-vaccine-leading-dise Sabin also announced that WHO granted prequalification for Typhim Vi, a typhoid Vi polysaccharide vaccine produced by Sanofi Pasteur. This is the first typhoid vaccine to be prequalified by the WHO, “allowing UNICEF, other UN agencies and the Pan American Health Organization Revolving Fund to procure the vaccine. WHO prequalification is also a prerequisite for GAVI Alliance support.” Sabin noted that with at least 200,000 deaths occurring worldwide from typhoid fever each year, and a further 16-33 million people falling ill, use of typhoid vaccines can contribute to achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. Dr. Shyam Raj Upreti, Director of the Child Health Division of the Department of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Population of Nepal, said, “WHO prequalification of a typhoid vaccine will accelerate the availability of this vaccine for children in Nepal and throughout Asia, where the burden of typhoid fever is highest.” http://sabin.org/newsresources/releases/2011/06/23/coalition-against-typhoid-applauds-world-healthorganization-preq J.P. Morgan announced that it will donate £1.5 million to the GAVI Alliance. The donation will be matched by the U.K. government’s newly created matching fund bringing the total to £3 million. GAVI Alliance Board Chair Dagfinn Hoybraten commented, “We are delighted to welcome J.P. Morgan as a Matching Fund partner. We recognise J.P. Morgan's strong commitment to social finance. This generous investment will help us fulfill our mission to save children’s lives and protect people’s health by increasing access to immunisation in developing countries. On behalf of the children we will vaccinate with these resources, our thanks go out to the people of J.P. Morgan.” http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110620006035/en/J.P.-Morgan-Pledges%C2%A31.5-Million-GAVI-Alliance Sanofi Pasteur Limited (Canada) said it opened a C$101 million dollar vaccine research and development facility at Sanofi Pasteur's Connaught Campus in north Toronto. This new facility “establishes the Connaught Campus as the North American Centre of Excellence in analytical and bioprocessing R&D for Sanofi Pasteur globally (and) solidifies the Toronto site as a national strategic asset for the research, development and manufacturing of vaccines that protect public health - in Canada and around the world.” The province of Ontario contributed C$13.9 million to the project through the Biopharmaceutical Investment Program, part of the Next Generation of Jobs Fund. The new R&D facility, known internally as "Building 95", “will help the company retain over 300 highly-skilled vaccine research positions and bring many of the company's accomplished scientists and state-of-the-art technologies under one roof.” Sanofi noted that the site “manufactures many vaccines vital to public health with 94% of its vaccine production being delivered to over 90 countries around the world. http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sanofi-pasteur-opens-100m-rdcentre-in-canada-124348274.html The Weekly Epidemiological Record (WER) for 24 June 2011, vol. 86, 26 (pp 269–276) includes: Index of countries/areas; Index, Volume 86, 2011, Nos. 1–26 – Subject index; Performance of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance and incidence of poliomyelitis, 2011 http://www.who.int/entity/wer/2011/wer8626.pdf Twitter Watch A selection of items of interest this week from a variety of twitter feeds. This capture is highly selective and by no means intended to be exhaustive. AIDSvaccine IAVI Want to know more about @AIDSvaccine is & what we do? Watch our short video: bit.ly/kWA5AE #HIV #AIDS #vaccine #research #globalhealth CDCgov CDC.gov 2.5mil deaths prevented in children under 5 due to measles, polio & diphtheria-tetanuspertussis vaccines go.usa.gov/Wtv #PH10 sabinvaccine Sabin Vaccine Inst. Major Funding Announced to Continue Development of #Vaccine for Human Hookworm Infection: bit.ly/lpGxF1 GAVIAlliance GAVI Alliance WATCH: the Center for Strategic & International Studies has posted a video about the June 13 conference and GAVI's future http://ht.ly/5nOpf GAVIAlliance GAVI Alliance The Economist- A shot in the arm: The world’s market for vaccines is being turned upside down http://ht.ly/5mG64 #4mlives Journal Watch [Editor’s Note] Vaccines: The Week in Review continues its weekly scanning of key journals to identify and cite articles, commentary and editorials, books reviews and other content supporting our focus on vaccine ethics and policy. Journal Watch is not intended to be exhaustive, but indicative of themes and issues the Center is actively tracking. We selectively provide full text of some editorial and comment articles that are specifically relevant to our work. Successful access to some of the links provided may require subscription or other access arrangement unique to the publisher. If you would like to suggest other journal titles to include in this service, please contact David Curry at: [email protected] Annals of Internal Medicine June 21, 2011; 154 (12) http://www.annals.org/content/current [No relevant content] British Medical Bulletin Volume 98 Issue 1 June 2011 http://bmb.oxfordjournals.org/content/current [Reviewed earlier; No relevant content] British Medical Journal 25 June 2011 Volume 342, Issue 7812 http://www.bmj.com/content/current Editorials Measles outbreak in Europe Simon Cottrell, Richard John Roberts BMJ 2011;342:doi:10.1136/bmj.d3724 (Published 15 June 2011) Extract Despite the current threat in Europe rates of infection are declining globally Current outbreaks of measles in Europe are a reminder of the important risks of death and serious morbidity associated with measles. Between 2009 and 2010, cases of measles increased dramatically in Europe, with notifications increasing from 7175 to 30 367. 1 In 2010 most reported cases were in Bulgaria (22 005), but there were also 5019 in France, 861 in Italy, 787 in Germany, 406 in Ireland, 397 in the United Kingdom, and 302 in Spain. Of these, 21 877 people were admitted to hospital and 21 died (case fatality 0.69 deaths/1000 reported cases); 71% of people infected were aged under 20 years and 85% were unvaccinated. The World Health Organization has reported outbreaks in 24 European countries already this year. 2 There is little sign of a decrease in cases in 2011, and travel has facilitated transmission between countries. From January to March 2011, 9349 cases were reported, and 18 of 32 reporting countries found that the incidence of measles was higher than during the same period in 2010. 3 Currently the French outbreak is the largest in Europe and it has not yet peaked. Since it began in 2008, France … Clinical Infectious Diseases Volume 53 Issue 2 July 15, 2011 http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/cid/current Major Articles Shioko Kawai, Seiichiro Nanri, Eiko Ban, Mikako Inokuchi, Tetsuya Tanaka, Mitsuaki Tokumura, Keiko Kimura, and Norio Sugaya Influenza Vaccination of Schoolchildren and Influenza Outbreaks in a School Clin Infect Dis. (2011) 53(2): 130-136 doi:10.1093/cid/cir336 Abstract Background. The objective of this retrospective descriptive study was to determine whether the universal influenza vaccination for schoolchildren was effective in controlling influenza outbreaks in a school. A universal vaccination program for schoolchildren was started in Japan in the 1960s, but the government abandoned the program in 1994 because of lack of evidence that the program was effective in preventing influenza in schoolchildren. Methods. Influenza vaccine coverage rates, total numbers of class cancellation days, and absentee rates were reviewed in a single elementary school during the 24-year period during 1984–2007. Results. The mean number of class cancellation days and the mean absentee rate in the compulsory vaccination period (1984–1987; mean vaccine coverage rate, 96.5%) were 1.3 days and 2.5%, respectively, and they increased to 8.3 days and 3.2% during the quasi-compulsory vaccination period (1988–1994; vaccine coverage, 66.4%). In the novaccination period (1995–1999; vaccine coverage, 2.4%), they were 20.5 days and 4.3%, respectively, and in the voluntary vaccination period (2000–2007; vaccine coverage, 38.9–78.6%), they were 7.0–9.3 days and 3.8%–3.9%. When minor epidemics were excluded, there was a significant inverse correlation between the vaccine coverage rates and both the number of class cancellation days and absentee rates. Conclusions. The universal influenza vaccination for schoolchildren was effective in reducing the number of class cancellation days and absenteeism in the school. Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation (accessed 26 June 2011) http://www.resource-allocation.com/ [No relevant content] Emerging Infectious Diseases Volume 17, Number 6–June 2011 http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/EID/index.htm [Reviewed earlier] Health Affairs June 2011; Volume 30, Issue 6 Strategies For The ‘Decade Of Vaccines’ http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/current [Reviewed earlier] Health Economics, Policy and Law Volume 6 - Issue 03 - 2011 http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=HEP&tab=currentissue [Reviewed earlier] Human Vaccines Volume 7, Issue 6 June 2011 http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/vaccines/toc/volume/7/issue/6/ [Reviewed earlier] JAMA June 22/29, 2011, Vol 305, No. 24, pp 2493-2592 http://jama.ama-assn.org/current.dtl Commentaries Health Advocacy Organizations and Evidence-Based Medicine Sheila M. Rothman JAMA. 2011;305(24):2569-2570.doi:10.1001/jama.2011.866 [No abstract: first 150 words per JAMA convention] Strong and independent not-for-profit advocacy organizations are vital to a democratic society. At their best, they stand apart from the interests of the marketplace and the government, helping to promote diverse public concerns. The scope of their activities is extensive. Some not-for-profit advocacy organizations spearhead campaigns to eliminate discriminatory legislation and improve the life chances of vulnerable groups. Others challenge economic interests to better protect the environment. Still others work to advance civil and human rights. Health advocacy organizations are part of this sector. They speak for targeted populations affected by a variety of diseases such as epilepsy, breast cancer, mental illness, and autism. They effectively communicate their priorities to legislators, regulators, private and public funders, and the media. Their initiatives often highlight needs that might otherwise be overlooked. However, some health advocacy organizations, as shall be illustrated, are so committed to securing diagnostic and treatment interventions for their targeted … Journal of Infectious Diseases Volume 204 Issue 2 July 15, 2011 http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jid/current [Reviewed earlier] The Lancet Jun 25, 2011 Volume 377 Number 9784 Pages 2151 - 2248 http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current [No relevant content] The Lancet Infectious Disease Jul 2011 Volume 11 Number 7 Pages 489 - 578 http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/issue/current Editorial Measles once again The Lancet Infectious Diseases An effective vaccine against measles has been available for the past 40 years. Before its introduction in 1963 there were almost 135 million cases of measles and over 6 million measles-related deaths per year. Globally, thanks to this vaccine the number of measles deaths worldwide fell by 78% between 2000 and 2008, from an estimated 733 000 to 164 000. However, despite these efforts, it is hard to believe that in the 21st century measles remains a leading vaccine-preventable cause of deaths in children younger than 5 years old. The disease is still endemic in many parts of Europe. In the past 2 years, Austria, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the UK have all seen outbreaks. In 2010, more than 27 795 cases of measles were reported in Europe, and 21 853 were reported during the 2009—10 outbreak in Bulgaria where 25 people died. In USA during the 1980s, the number of measles cases was low but a big increase occurred in 1989 with almost 18 000 cases reported. Lack of a second dose of measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine could have decreased the level of immunity among the school-age population, among whom most of the cases were reported. Subsequently, two rounds of vaccination were recommended. At the end of 2000, thanks to vaccination, the ongoing transmission of endemic measles was declared eliminated in the USA. However, this year from January 1 to May 20, 118 cases were reported in the USA. 46% of the cases were imported, most from countries in the WHO European region. Before the era of vaccination, immunity against measles was acquired by natural infection or by protection given by antibodies transmitted from the mother to the fetus during gestation. Measles transmission requires contact between a susceptible person and the infectious secretions of a person with measles. The incidence of measles varies cyclically. Incidence rises as susceptible individuals enter the population. Acquisition of immunity through exposure to the virus or vaccination decreases the number of susceptible individual in the population and measles incidence falls. The interval between epidemic peaks is proportional to the number of susceptible individuals that accumulate over time. In the presence of vaccination, the interval between peaks of disease can be 10 years; without vaccination, the interval can be 3—4 years. A decline in the uptake of immunisation in the past decade has increased the susceptible population and measles has resurged. Elimination of measles, defined as the interruption of indigenous transmission, is difficult because the disease is very contagious and transmissible before an infected person shows signs of illness. Ideally, two doses of MMR vaccine given to 95% of children are required to halt the spread of the virus. By 2009 only 60% of countries worldwide had achieved 90% coverage with at least one vaccine dose. Difficulty accessing services, religious beliefs, and vaccine scepticism are only part of the reasons for low coverage. Better organisation of the vaccination systems is required—for example, 10% of children receive one dose of vaccine but then miss the second shot. Lack of reminders and difficulty tracking moving families are among the weaknesses of the vaccine system. However, elimination is not impossible. Measles was eliminated from the Americas in 2000, but progress towards elimination in the European region has faltered. By 2010, 30 of the 53 European countries had reached the target of a measles incidence of fewer than one case per million population. The WHO Europe strategic plan for measles 2010—15 sets targets of 90% measles vaccination coverage, and reductions in the number of cases to fewer than five per million and in mortality by 95% compared with 2000 levels. Additional effort and resources from European states are needed to reach the above targets. Vaccine acceptability could be improved through better communication with the public. Thought needs to be given to targeted messaging campaigns and perhaps the recruitment of public figures as advocates for vaccination. Catch-up vaccination campaigns outside the routine system are needed to cover susceptible populations. Commitment from governments, donors, and parents is needed to make measles a disease of the past. Despite recent outbreaks, elimination in Europe in the in the next 4 years should be achievable, and would inspire efforts in developing regions, which still have the highest burden of the disease: global eradication of the disease in this generation would spare future generations from this preventable disease. Articles Safety and efficacy of the HVTN 503/Phambili Study of a clade-B-based HIV-1 vaccine in South Africa: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled testof-concept phase 2b study Glenda E Gray, Mary Allen, Zoe Moodie, Gavin Churchyard, Linda-Gail Bekker, Maphoshane Nchabeleng, Koleka Mlisana, Barbara Metch, Guy de Bruyn, Mary H Latka, Surita Roux, Matsontso Mathebula, Nivashnee Naicker, Constance Ducar, Donald K Carter, Adrien Puren, Niles Eaton, M Julie McElrath, Michael Robertson, Lawrence Corey, James G Kublin, on behalf of the HVTN 503/Phambili study team Preview The MRKAd5 HIV-1 vaccine did not prevent HIV-1 infection or lower viral-load setpoint; however, stopping our trial early probably compromised our ability to draw conclusions. The high incidence rates noted in South Africa highlight the crucial need for intensified efforts to develop an efficacious vaccine. Review Rationale for pertussis booster vaccination throughout life in Europe Fred Zepp, Ulrich Heininger, Jussi Mertsola, Ewa Bernatowska, Nicole Guiso, John Roord, Alberto E Tozzi, Pierre Van Damme Preview Although the introduction of universal pertussis immunisation in infants has greatly reduced the number of reported cases in infants and young children, disease incidence has been increasing in adolescents and adults in recent years. This changing epidemiological pattern is probably largely attributable to waning immunity after natural infection or vaccination. Furthermore, improved diagnostic testing, active surveillance, changes in disease susceptibility, vaccine characteristics, and increased awareness of the disease might also be contributing factors. Medical Decision Making (MDM) May/June 2011; 31 (3) http://mdm.sagepub.com/content/current [Reviewed earlier] Nature Volume 474 Number 7352 pp419-536 23 June 2011 http://www.nature.com/nature/current_issue.html News Vaccine trial's ethics criticized Collapsed trial fuels unfounded vaccine fears. Priya Shetty A clinical trial that came under fire in India threatens to have a dual legacy: inflaming unfounded fears about a lifesaving vaccine and raising new questions about the management of medical research in the country. After four teenage girls taking part in a test of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines died last year, the Indian government faced accusations that its citizens were being used as guinea pigs to test dangerous vaccines. A scientific investigation has exonerated the vaccines but uncovered a more familiar problem in India: ethical irregularities. The study, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and run by the international health charity PATH and the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), vaccinated more than 23,000 girls aged 10–14 against HPV, which can cause cervical cancer. The vaccines — Merck's Gardasil and GlaxoSmithKline's Cervarix — are already in widespread use in the developed world, and the study was designed to assess the feasibility of launching an HPV-immunization programme in the Indian health system. The researchers hoped to gauge public acceptance of the vaccines and assess the costs of administering it in different parts of the country. A committee of three scientists from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi, commissioned by the government to look into the trial, confirmed that the deaths were not linked to the vaccines — two of the girls died of poisoning, one of drowning and the fourth of a fever. But its report, leaked to India's media last month, said that the study involved several serious ethical violations. According to media reports, participants were recruited from vulnerable tribal populations, consent was improperly obtained — headmasters of the girls' schools signed the forms — and adverse events were poorly recorded… Nature Medicine June 2011, Volume 17 No 6 http://www.nature.com/nm/index.html [Reviewed earlier] New England Journal of Medicine June 23, 2011 Vol. 364 No. 25 http://content.nejm.org/current.shtml [No relevant content] The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal July 2011 - Volume 30 - Issue 7 pp: A9-A10,545-632,e109-e129 http://journals.lww.com/pidj/pages/currenttoc.aspx [No relevant content] Pediatrics June 2011, VOLUME 127 / ISSUE 6 http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/current.shtml [Reviewed earlier] Pharmacoeconomics July 1, 2011 - Volume 29 - Issue 7 pp: 549-635 http://adisonline.com/pharmacoeconomics/pages/currenttoc.aspx [Reviewed earlier] PLoS Medicine (Accessed 26 June 2011: database unavailable) http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/browse.action?field=date [No relevant content] Science 24 June 2011 vol 332, issue 6037, pages 1469-1596 http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl [No relevant content] Science Translational Medicine 22 June 2011 vol 3, issue 88 http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/current Research Articles Tuberculosis Immunogenicity of the Tuberculosis Vaccine MVA85A Is Reduced by Coadministration with EPI Vaccines in a Randomized Controlled Trial in Gambian Infants Martin O. C. Ota, Aderonke A. Odutola, Patrick K. Owiafe, Simon Donkor, Olumuyiwa A. Owolabi, Nathaniel J. Brittain, Nicola Williams, Sarah Rowland-Jones, Adrian V. S. Hill, Richard A. Adegbola, and Helen McShane 22 June 2011: 88ra56 Abstract New tuberculosis vaccines are urgently needed to curtail the current epidemic. MVA85A is a subunit vaccine that could enhance immunity from BCG vaccination. To determine MVA85A safety and immunogenicity as well as interactions with other routine vaccines administered in infancy, we randomized healthy 4-month-old infants who had received Bacille Calmette-Guérin at birth to receive Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) vaccines alone, EPI and MVA85A simultaneously, or MVA85A alone. Adverse events were monitored throughout. Blood samples obtained before vaccination and at 1, 4, and 20 weeks after vaccination were used to assess safety and immunogenicity. The safety profile of both low and standard doses was comparable, but the standard dose was more immunogenic and therefore was selected for the second stage of the study. In total, 72 (first stage) and 142 (second stage) infants were enrolled. MVA85A was safe and well tolerated and induced a potent cellular immune response. Coadministration of MVA85A with EPI vaccines was associated with a significant reduction in MVA85A immunogenicity, but did not affect humoral responses to the EPI vaccines. These results provide important information regarding timing of immunizations, which is required for the design of infant efficacy trials with MVA85A, and suggest that modifications to the standard EPI schedule may be required to incorporate a new generation of T cell– inducing vaccines. Meeting Reports Therapeutics Development Leveraging Crowdsourcing to Facilitate the Discovery of New Medicines Thea C. Norman, Chas Bountra, Aled M. Edwards, Keith R. Yamamoto, and Stephen H. Friend 22 June 2011: 88mr1 Abstract Gloomy predictions about the future of pharma have forced the industry to investigate alternative models of drug discovery. Public-private partnerships (PPPs) have the potential to revitalize the discovery and development of first-in-class therapeutics. The new PPP Arch2POCM hopes to foster biomedical innovation through precompetitive validation of pioneer therapeutic targets for human diseases. In this meeting report, we capture insights garnered from the April 2011 Arch2POCM conference. Tropical Medicine & International Health July 2011 Volume 16, Issue 7 Pages 773–903 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tmi.2011.16.issue-6/issuetoc [Reviewed earlier] Vaccine http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X Volume 29, Supplement 1, Pages A1-A50 (1 July 2011) Supplement Theme: Transfer of Technology for Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Production in Developing Countries Edited by Ray Spier [13 articles covering this theme are presented in this supplement; the first two articles are included below] Technology transfer to developing country vaccine manufacturers to improve global influenza vaccine production: A success story and a window into the future Page A1 F Marc LaForce [No abstract] WHO initiative to increase global and equitable access to influenza vaccine in the event of a pandemic: Supporting developing country production capacity through technology transfer Pages A2-A7 Martin Friede, Laszlo Palkonyay, Claudia Alfonso, Yuri Pervikov, Guido Torelli, David Wood, Marie Paule Kieny Abstract Should a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus, such as the H5N1 virus type currently circulating in birds, become transmissible among humans, an effective vaccine, rapidly available in vast quantities, would be the best tool to prevent high case-fatalities and the breakdown of health and social services. The number of vaccine doses that could be produced on demand has risen sharply over the last few years; however, it is still alarmingly short of the 13 billion doses that would be needed if two doses were required to protect fully the world's population. Most developing countries would be last in the queue to benefit from a pandemic vaccine. The World Health Organization, together with governments, the pharmaceutical industry and other stakeholders, has been implementing the global pandemic influenza action plan to increase vaccine supply since 2006. Building capacity in developing countries to manufacture influenza vaccine is an integral part of this plan, as well as research and development into more efficacious technologies, e.g. those that allow significant dose-sparing. To this end, the influenza vaccine technology transfer initiative was launched in 2007 and, to date, vaccine manufacturers in 11 developing countries have received grants to acquire the capacity to produce inactivated or live attenuated influenza vaccine for their populations. In addition, a centralized ‘hub’ has been established to facilitate training in the new technologies for scientists and regulators in the countries. This supplement of Vaccine is devoted to showcasing the interim results of the WHO initiative and the impressive progress made by the developing country manufacturers. Value in Health June 2011, Vol. 14, No. 4 http://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/home [Reviewed last week]