Social complexity of a fentanyl vaccine to prevent opioid overdose conference proceedings: Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study conference proceedings
- PMID: 39317618
- DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.126324
Social complexity of a fentanyl vaccine to prevent opioid overdose conference proceedings: Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study conference proceedings
Abstract
Despite significant public health attention and investment, hundreds of thousands of individuals have suffered fatal opioid overdose since the onset of the opioid crisis. Risk of opioid overdose has been exacerbated by the influx of fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, into the drug supply. The National Institutes of Health Helping End Addiction Long-term (HEAL) Initiative is supporting the development of vaccines targeting fentanyl to protect against overdose. If successful, a vaccine would induce anti-fentanyl antibodies to sequester fentanyl (but not other opioids) in the blood, preventing fentanyl from crossing into the brain and reaching the central nervous system where it can cause overdose. Introduction of an overdose preventing strategy that relies on a vaccine to confer passive protection may be impactful. However, vaccines are poorly understood by the public and politicized. Moreover, the overdose ecosystem is complex and extends across numerous social, economic, medical, and cultural systems. As such, optimal use of a vaccine strategy to address overdose may benefit from multidisciplinary consideration of the social, ethical, and systemic factors that influence substance use and overdose that may also impact the acceptability of a fentanyl vaccine and related implementation strategies. In March 2022, Dr. Elissa Weitzman convened a two-day conference at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study on the Social Complexity of a Fentanyl Vaccine to Prevent Opioid Overdose. In all, 19 professionals from diverse disciplines (medicine, psychology, history, ethics, immunology, vaccinology, communications, policy) attended the conference and led discussions that centered on population health and epidemiology, history of medicine and frameworks for understanding substance use, ethics, decision-making and attitudes, and operational issues to the question of a novel immunotherapy targeting fentanyl overdose. Participants also debated the risks and benefits of vaccine administration in response to fictional clinical case vignettes. A summary of the conference presentations and discussions follows.
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Dr. Elissa Weitzman reports that administrative support for the conference was provided by Harvard University Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Dr. Elissa Weitzman is an advisor to Ovax, Inc. Conference participants and contributors have the following disclosures: AC has conducted unpaid webinars for Jansen Pharmaceuticals, has a paid contract with Web MD/Medscape to provide op-eds about medical ethics, has done legal work with Parker Waichman LLP, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, and NY State AG opioid litigation, and consulted for Angamo, Sanofi, Novartis (unpaid), Abeona, paid), Cabaletta (paid), and Penn Orphan Disease Center’s Advisory Board (unpaid). DJD has served as a consultant for Merck Research Laboratories/Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. (a Merck & Co., Inc. subsidiary), and is on EdJen BioTech's scientific advisory board. DJD is a co-founder of Ovax, Inc. DJD is a named inventor on patents held by Boston Children’s Hospital relating to vaccines, adjuvants and human in vitro systems. OL is a named inventor on patents held by Boston Children's Hospital relating to vaccine adjuvants and human in vitro systems that model vaccine action. He is a consultant to GSK and Hillevax and co-founder of Ovax. SL is a named inventor on a patent held by Boston Children's Hospital relating to adjuvanted opioid vaccines and serves as a consultant to Ovax, which was co-founded by her husband, OL. All other conference participants have no relevant conflicts of interest to report.
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