The Future of Epidemic and Pandemic Vaccines to Serve Global Public Health Needs

Author:

Farlow Andrew12,Torreele Els3ORCID,Gray Glenda4,Ruxrungtham Kiat56,Rees Helen7,Prasad Sai8,Gomez Carolina9,Sall Amadou10,Magalhães Jorge11ORCID,Olliaro Piero12ORCID,Terblanche Petro13

Affiliation:

1. Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Broad St., Oxford OX1 3BD, UK

2. Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford, Broad St., Oxford OX1 3BD, UK

3. Independent Consultant and Institute for Innovation & Public Purpose (IIPP), University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK

4. Office of the President, South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC), Tygerberg 7050, South Africa

5. Center of Excellence in Vaccine Research and Development (Chula Vaccine Research Center, Chula VRC), Bangkok 10330, Thailand

6. School of Global Health (SGH), Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand

7. Wits RHI, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2050, South Africa

8. Bharat Biotech International Limited, Genome Valley, Shameerpet, Hyderabad 500 078, India

9. Facultad de Derecho, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Cra 45, Bogotá 111321, Colombia

10. Virology Department, Institut Pasteur de Dakar, 36, Avenue Pasteur, Dakar 10200, Senegal

11. Centre for Technological Innovation, Institute of Drugs Technology–Farmanguinhos, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro 21041-210, Brazil

12. ISARIC Global Support Centre International Severe Acute Respiratory and Emerging Infection Consortium, Pandemic Sciences Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3BD, UK

13. Afrigen Biologics (Pty) Ltd., Cape Town 7441, South Africa

Abstract

This Review initiates a wide-ranging discussion over 2023 by selecting and exploring core themes to be investigated more deeply in papers submitted to the Vaccines Special Issue on the “Future of Epidemic and Pandemic Vaccines to Serve Global Public Health Needs”. To tackle the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, an acceleration of vaccine development across different technology platforms resulted in the emergency use authorization of multiple vaccines in less than a year. Despite this record speed, many limitations surfaced including unequal access to products and technologies, regulatory hurdles, restrictions on the flow of intellectual property needed to develop and manufacture vaccines, clinical trials challenges, development of vaccines that did not curtail or prevent transmission, unsustainable strategies for dealing with variants, and the distorted allocation of funding to favour dominant companies in affluent countries. Key to future epidemic and pandemic responses will be sustainable, global-public-health-driven vaccine development and manufacturing based on equitable access to platform technologies, decentralised and localised innovation, and multiple developers and manufacturers, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). There is talk of flexible, modular pandemic preparedness, of technology access pools based on non-exclusive global licensing agreements in exchange for fair compensation, of WHO-supported vaccine technology transfer hubs and spokes, and of the creation of vaccine prototypes ready for phase I/II trials, etc. However, all these concepts face extraordinary challenges shaped by current commercial incentives, the unwillingness of pharmaceutical companies and governments to share intellectual property and know-how, the precariousness of building capacity based solely on COVID-19 vaccines, the focus on large-scale manufacturing capacity rather than small-scale rapid-response innovation to stop outbreaks when and where they occur, and the inability of many resource-limited countries to afford next-generation vaccines for their national vaccine programmes. Once the current high subsidies are gone and interest has waned, sustaining vaccine innovation and manufacturing capability in interpandemic periods will require equitable access to vaccine innovation and manufacturing capabilities in all regions of the world based on many vaccines, not just “pandemic vaccines”. Public and philanthropic investments will need to leverage enforceable commitments to share vaccines and critical technology so that countries everywhere can establish and scale up vaccine development and manufacturing capability. This will only happen if we question all prior assumptions and learn the lessons offered by the current pandemic. We invite submissions to the special issue, which we hope will help guide the world towards a global vaccine research, development, and manufacturing ecosystem that better balances and integrates scientific, clinical trial, regulatory, and commercial interests and puts global public health needs first.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Immunology

Reference104 articles.

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4. WHO (2023, March 08). COVAX Calls for Urgent Action to Close Vaccine Equity Gap, Available online: https://www.who.int/news/item/20-05-2022-covax-calls-for-urgent-action-to-close-vaccine-equity-gap.

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