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R&D News Roundup: April 3, 2023

 

Top News in R&D

We're running out of new antibiotics, WHO warns
Gizmodo (3/29), features Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator (CARB-X)

The World Health Organization (WHO) recently warned about the limited pipeline of new antibiotics for drug-resistant bacteria in a report based on a review published by WHO in 2022. The report found that only 12 new antibiotics entered the market between 2017 and 2021. Additionally, the report found that although 27 experimental antibiotics for critical bacterial infections are in clinical development, only 6 of those are considered different enough from existing antibiotics to potentially be used against drug-resistant pathogens without concern. Without a steady stream of novel antibiotics entering the pipeline and market, bacterial infections will become increasingly dangerous as bacteria continues to develop resistance to existing drugs.

HDT Bio's Zika and HIV vaccines generate immune responses in pregnant rabbits and their offspring
Fierce Biotech (3/27)

A new study from researchers at HDT Bio found that a new type of RNA vaccine against HIV and the Zika virus generated strong antibody responses in pregnant rabbits and their offspring. More studies will be necessary to confirm that vaccinating the mother alone is enough to protect against infection in the offspring, as well as to optimize vaccination timing and to see if the results can translate to humans. If successful, the vaccine could be an important tool in preventing mother-to-child transmission of these viruses and reducing the disease burden in newborns.

HIV can persist for years in myeloid cells of people on antiretroviral therapy
US National Institutes of Health news release (3/27)

A new study from researchers at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, supported by the US National Institutes of Health, found that HIV can persist in myeloid cells, a subset of white blood cells, in people who have been virally suppressed for years through antiretroviral therapy. The researchers emphasized that these findings challenge the long-held idea that these cells are short-lived, proving instead that these cells may contribute to an HIV reservoir and could be an important target in the development of a cure. Larger studies with more diverse participant pools will be needed to identify the proportion of people who show latent HIV in myeloid cells, as well as the mechanisms that replenish this reservoir over time.

 

 

News from GHTC

Rapid pathogen ID/AST market begins to recover post-COVID as drug-resistant infections spike
360Dx (3/30), features CARB-X, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and FIND

Medicines Patent Pool signs sublicences with Aurobindo, Cipla and Viatris to produce generic versions of ViiV Healthcare’s innovative long-acting HIV prevention medicine
Medicines Patent Pool press release (3/30), features AVAC

Opinion: The business case for investing in neglected tropical diseases
Devex (3/29), co-written by Willo Brock from FIND

How can HIV cure trials increase racial and gender diversity and equity?
Aidsmap (3/29), features Treatment Action Group

WHO ready For Marburg vaccine trials, awaits nod from governments of Tanzania and Equatorial Guinea
Health Policy Watch (3/29), features Sabin Vaccine Institute

Opinion: Biden’s budget boosts funds for future pandemics, but cuts them for current ones
STAT (3/28), written by Colin Puzo Smith from RESULTS, features the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations

mRNA vaccine beats infection for key defense against COVID-19, Stanford Medicine scientists find
Stanford Medicine news article (3/28), features the Gates Foundation

 

 

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