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R&D News Roundup: June 20, 2023

 

Top News in R&D

FDA advisers endorse updating Covid vaccines to target latest Omicron strain
STAT (6/15)

Last week, the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) scientific advisers recommended that the next round of COVID-19 vaccines include only the newest variants that have become dominant worldwide, the XBB strains of Omicron, echoing recommendations from the World Health Organization’s vaccine advisers and European regulators. After the FDA makes the final decision, vaccine developers say updated shots could be available within months. The recommendation is based on the idea that the XBB variants are different enough from each other to push the immune system to make more diverse, cross-protective antibodies as opposed to keeping the original strain in the shot, which can cause people’s immune systems to respond more strongly to that strain because of previous, repeated exposure rather than the new strains included in the dose.

Scientists develop two novel oral polio vaccines to bolster WHO's push to eradicate polio
NewsMedical (6/14)

Researchers at the University of California San Francisco and the National Institute of Biological Standards and Control in the United Kingdom have developed two novel oral polio vaccines, the first new vaccines for polio in 50 years. The vaccines are made from weakened poliovirus that has been genetically engineered to reduce the development of mutations to the active form of the virus, which have been a major challenge of oral polio vaccines, leading to outbreaks of vaccine-derived polio even in countries where the disease was previously believed to have been eliminated. To address those outbreaks as well as uneven vaccination rates worldwide that have led to the continued circulation of the virus, the new vaccines can hopefully be part of the World Health Organization’s most recent push to eradicate polio globally.

First phase 3 trial of a chikungunya vaccine candidate finds it is generally safe and provokes an immune response
MedicalXpress ​(6/12), features Valneva

A phase 3 trial recently published in The Lancet found that Valneva’s FLA1553 vaccine candidate for chikungunya disease was generally well-tolerated and produced an immune response in 99 percent of study participants in chikungunya-endemic regions. There are currently no approved vaccines or effective antiviral treatments for the disease caused by chikungunya infection. The vaccine developers hope that this candidate could become the first vaccine available for people living in as well as travelers to chikungunya-endemic regions or regions at risk of an outbreak. The vaccine could become even more important as climate change is expected to drive the global spread of mosquitoes—and therefore mosquito-borne viruses like chikungunya—to new areas.

 

 

News from GHTC

The epic story of our best malaria drug
Vox (6/18), features Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV)

Citing gaps in critical medical testing, World Health Organization calls on countries to act
360Dx (6/16), features FIND

Preventative seasonal malaria treatment is saving thousands of children
Health Policy Watch (6/16), cowritten by Dr André Marie Tchouatieu, director of chemoprevention access and product management at MMV

Gates Foundation to donate $50 million, partner With Beijing and Tsinghua to fight infectious disease
Forbes (6/15), features the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Progress in the fight against AMR
European Biotechnology (6/13), features Bugworks, the Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator's (CARB-X), and the Global Antibiotic Research & Development Partnership (GARDP)

CEPI partners with Celestial Therapeutics Inc to develop self-adjuvanting mRNA vaccine platform
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) press relase (6/13)

Antibiotic-resistant bugs claim over 200,000 infants globally per year, finds major study
Spotlight (6/12), features GARDP

Avails Medical submits eQUANT system to FDA, awarded additional $5.4M from CARB-X
360Dx (6/12), features CARB-X

BPaL a ‘game-changer’ for treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis
Healio (6/10), features a drug developed by TB Alliance

The Atlantic Declaration: A framework for a twenty-first century U.S.-UK economic partnership
White House press release (6/8), features CARB-X

 

 

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