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Review
. 2023 Sep 26:64:102222.
doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102222. eCollection 2023 Oct.

Time to establish an international vaccine candidate pool for potential highly infectious respiratory disease: a community's view

Affiliations
Review

Time to establish an international vaccine candidate pool for potential highly infectious respiratory disease: a community's view

Lan Yao et al. EClinicalMedicine. .

Abstract

In counteracting highly infectious and disruptive respiratory diseases such as COVID-19, vaccination remains the primary and safest way to prevent disease, reduce the severity of illness, and save lives. Unfortunately, vaccination is often not the first intervention deployed for a new pandemic, as it takes time to develop and test vaccines, and confirmation of safety requires a period of observation after vaccination to detect potential late-onset vaccine-associated adverse events. In the meantime, nonpharmacologic public health interventions such as mask-wearing and social distancing can provide some degree of protection. As climate change, with its environmental impacts on pathogen evolution and international mobility continue to rise, highly infectious respiratory diseases will likely emerge more frequently and their impact is expected to be substantial. How quickly a safe and efficacious vaccine can be deployed against rising infectious respiratory diseases may be the most important challenge that humanity will face in the near future. While some organizations are engaged in addressing the World Health Organization's "blueprint for priority diseases", the lack of worldwide preparedness, and the uncertainty around universal vaccine availability, remain major concerns. We therefore propose the establishment of an international candidate vaccine pool repository for potential respiratory diseases, supported by multiple stakeholders and countries that contribute facilities, technologies, and other medical and financial resources. The types and categories of candidate vaccines can be determined based on information from previous pandemics and epidemics. Each participant country or region can focus on developing one or a few vaccine types or categories, together covering most if not all possible potential infectious diseases. The safety of these vaccines can be tested using animal models. Information for effective candidates that can be potentially applied to humans will then be shared across all participants. When a new pandemic arises, these pre-selected and tested vaccines can be quickly tested in RCTs for human populations.

Keywords: COVID-19; Disease; Infection; International collaboration; Vaccine.

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Conflict of interest statement

Peter Hotez is a co-inventor of a COVID-19 recombinant protein vaccine technology owned by Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) that was recently licensed by BCM non-exclusively and with no patent restrictions to several companies committed to advance vaccines for low- and middle-income countries. The co-inventors have no involvement in license negotiations conducted by BCM. Similar to other research universities, a long-standing BCM policy provides its faculty and staff, who make discoveries that result in a commercial license, a share of any royalty income, according to BCM policy. Jerome H. Kim services as the consultant for SK bioscience and Moderna. Other authors declare no competing financial interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Function and organization of international vaccine candidate pool. (A) Function Position and Interaction. It shows how the InterVax works with WHO, Public/Private organizations, Research Institutes, Vaccine producer, Profit organizations and Governments/individuals. (B) Vaccine Pool Organization. The flowchart demonstrates the supports InterVax obtained from various organizations and data shared with industrial sections.

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