Top News in R&D
 
 

 

 

READ ONLINE

 

 
 
 
 Global Health Technologies Coalition 
 
 
 
 

 

R&D News Roundup: May 20, 2024

 

Top News in R&D

WHO updates list of drug-resistant bacteria most threatening to human health
WHO news release (5/17)

On Friday, the World Health Organization (WHO) released its updated Bacterial Priority Pathogens List 2024, which aims to guide investments and R&D in new antibiotics and promote international coordination to address the rising global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The updated list, which incorporates new evidence and expert insights, includes 15 families of antibiotic-resistant bacteria grouped into critical, high, and medium categories for prioritization based on their burden and ability to resist treatment and spread resistance to other bacteria. Five pathogen-antibiotic combinations were removed from the new list and four new combinations were added, reflecting the dynamic nature of AMR.

UN agency authorizes second vaccine against dengue amid outbreaks in the Americas
Associated Press (5/15)

Last week, WHO authorized a second vaccine for dengue, which will hopefully offer millions more worldwide protection against the mosquito-borne disease, which is currently behind a major outbreak in the Americas and rising cases globally. The two-dose vaccine, made by Takeda, protects against the four types of dengue and is recommended for use in children between six and sixteen years old in regions with high dengue rates. The decision opens the door for donors and other United Nations agencies to purchase the vaccine for high-burden countries.

FDA greenlights self-collection of vaginal samples for cervical cancer screening
CNN (5/15), features BD

Last week, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the use of self-collected samples with Roche and BD’s HPV tests, a decision that hopefully will expand access and reduce barriers to HPV screening, allowing more people to detect and treat cervical cancer. Screening for HPV is used to identify those who may be at risk of developing cervical cancer, most cases of which are caused by persistent HPV infection. Traditional screening involves a speculum-involved pelvic exam to screen for cervical cancer, which can be painful or uncomfortable for many patients. Self-collection allows patients to collect their own vaginal samples for screening in a health care setting.

 

 

News from GHTC

WHO member states must embrace historic opportunity to strengthen R&D for longstanding and emerging health challenges
GHTC statement (5/20)

Report calls for 'urgent action' to boost antibiotic pipeline
CIDRAP (5/15), features the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator

Investment in vaccine development is low. How can that be fixed?
Managed Healthcare Executive (5/13), features PATH and the Gates Foundation

Valneva reports further positive pivotal phase 3 data in adolescents for its single-shot chikungunya vaccine
Valneva press release (5/13)

Scientists to test if COVID-19 variant vaccine protects against other coronaviruses
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations press release (5/13), features the International Vaccine Institute

 

 

Highlights From the Week

Animal studies lend support to an innovative HIV vaccine strategy — but there’s still a long way to go
STAT (5/17)

CDC warns of a resurgence of mpox
The New York Times (5/16)

UK announces funding to boost global fight against antimicrobial resistance
CIDRAP (5/16)

AstraZeneca prepares fresh COVID push to regulators after antibody's phase 3 success
Fierce Biotech (5/16)

HPV vaccine program tied to big drop in cervical cancers across all socioeconomic strata
CIDRAP (5/16)

Chinese biotech crackdown would reset U.S. drug development
Axios (5/15)

Fighting malaria with math? How one U of T researcher is studying the evolution of a parasite
University of Toronto news article (5/15)

HIV vaccine approach works like GPS 
Futurity (5/15)

US relaxes regulations for labs handling bird flu samples to ease virus response
Reuters (5/14)

Scientists demystify why subsequent bouts of dengue are worse than a first-time infection
MedicalXpress (5/14)

Trial of super-vaccine against coronaviruses expected in 2025
Health Policy Watch (5/14)

Injectable HIV medication is superior to oral medication for patients who frequently miss doses, study finds
MedicalXpress (5/14)

CDC makes public influenza A wastewater data to assist bird flu probe
Reuters (5/14)

What to know about COVID FLiRT variants
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health news article (5/13)

Course correcting the U.S. response to bird flu
Think Global Health (5/13)

FDA warns against use of Cue Health COVID-19 tests
360Dx (5/13)

Study highlights need for cell-type-specific therapies in treatment of HIV
MedicalXpress (5/13)

FDA clears Qiagen QiaStat-Dx rapid syndromic respiratory panel
360Dx (5/13)

Shionogi's antiviral comes up short in global COVID-19 trial
Fierce Pharma (5/13)

 

 

Upcoming Events