Mapping the Journey to an HIV Vaccine

New England Journal of Medicine
July 25, 2013  Vol. 369 No. 4
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal

Mapping the Journey to an HIV Vaccine
Margaret Ackerman, Ph.D., and Galit Alter, Ph.D.
N Engl J Med 2013; 369:389-391
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMcibr130443
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMcibr1304437

“Universal” vaccines that elicit cross-reactive and broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) are the ultimate goal of efforts to provide protective immunity against both the influenza virus and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Infection with either virus leads to the induction of abundant strain-specific antibodies that are easily evaded by subsequent viral variants. However, the circulating diversity of HIV is greater than that of influenza by orders of magnitude, posing a tremendous challenge to the achievement of vaccine-mediated protection.

New hope for a universal sterilizing HIV vaccine arose several years ago with the evidence that bNAbs emerge in 10 to 30% of infected persons.1 Because these bNAb responses typically appear after 2 to 3 years of infection, they fail to control established infection: the kinetics of the evolving B-cell response lag behind the rapidly diversifying virus, and they cannot “catch up” to control established infection. However, these bNAbs have provided protection from infection at remarkably low doses in animals, suggesting that vaccine-induced bNAbs could provide sterilizing immunity if they were present before infection. Translating our current knowledge of bNAbs into a vaccine remains a daunting challenge, since the mechanism by which such antibodies are induced remains enigmatic.

As compared with other antibodies, bNAbs have unusual characteristics, including odd physical structures (e.g., elongated antigen-binding loops) and remarkably high levels of mutation that affect antibody–antigen binding and structural domains.2 These changes accumulate over years of infection as exposure to diverse viral variants drives antibody evolution, resulting in the generation of a set of antibodies that bears little similarity to their original antigen-naive B-cell ancestors (i.e., germline sequences).

Liao et al.3 have recently described the path along which bNAbs develop. They tracked the evolution of a single bNAb and the counter-evolution of an HIV virus (Figure 1Figure 1The Coevolution of Virus and Antibody.), starting in the first weeks of infection. Their findings offer a roadmap for the induction of bNAbs through vaccination (Figure 2Figure 2Leading Antibodies Down the Path to Neutralization.).

Two key events distinguished the interaction of B-cell and virus during the developing natural history of this bNAb. First, whereas in most scenarios the naive B-cell population cannot bind to HIV, the naive B-cell repertoire in this infected person bound to the earliest incoming virus (the transmitted virus), which suggests that early rapid diversification of the B-cell response was initiated very soon after infection. Second, the rapid evolution of mutations affecting antibodies, which is required for potent antibody neutralization, occurs simultaneously with the rapid diversification of the virus in the first few months of infection. This occurrence suggests that the timing of the exposure to diverse viral variants may be crucial to the induction of protective antibody immunity.

Although the early evolution of the antibody response predominantly occurred within the antigen-recognition site, Liao et al. found that later evolutionary changes in the antibody occurred in structural regions, which are thought to have a limited role in antigen recognition.    However, in a recent publication by Klein et al.,4 the authors report that mutations affecting these structural regions can potentiate antibody function. The authors found that among a set of diverse bNAbs, mutations affecting the structural regions are not just incidental to extensive mutation but are actually critical to neutralization, providing breadth and potency through multiple mechanisms — by expanding the antigen-recognition footprint, by subtly altering binding-loop positioning, and perhaps by changing the conformational dynamics of antibody–antigen binding.

Together, these studies highlight key features of the immune system’s natural induction of bNAbs. First, effective initiation of the antibody response depends on the early interactions between the virus and the naive B-cell repertoire. Second, an explosion of viral diversity can drive the molecular evolution of a bNAb. Finally, neutralization potency arises in an unanticipated way — by means of mutations affecting structural regions of the antibody.

Although we encode a finite number of B-cell–receptor sequences within our naive antibody repertoire, these sequences can become hugely diversified after initial selection and driven in specific directions by subsequent antigen exposure, in a process called affinity maturation, permitting nearly infinite exploration of antibody-recognition space. This idea raises the following questions: How can this finite set of naive sequences be effectively recruited initially, and how can the evolution of the antibody response be constrained to recognize HIV in a way that leads to neutralization? These studies suggest that the rational design of an effective HIV vaccine will require directed-antigen evolution to generate HIV-envelope immunogens that will robustly bind and trigger the germline-naive B-cell repertoire5 (Figure 2).

Despite the 200 years that have elapsed since Edward Jenner’s smallpox vaccine, the development of vaccines has remained, for the most part, an empirical process. The studies by Liao et al. and Klein et al. outline the evolution of bNAb activity and may therefore enable the design of a universally protective vaccine against HIV and possibly other viruses.

Influenza among the elderly in the Americas: a consensus statement

Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública/Pan American Journal of Public Health (RPSP/PAJPH)
June 2013  Vol. 33, No. 6
http://www.paho.org/journal/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=125&Itemid=224

SPECIAL REPORTS
 Influenza among the elderly in the Americas: a consensus statement [La gripe en los ancianos de la Región de las Américas: una declaración de consenso]
Ricardo W. Rüttimann, Pablo E. Bonvehí, Diana Vilar-Compte, Raúl E. Isturiz, Jaime A. Labarca, and Edison I. Vida

Physicians Infrequently Adhere to Hepatitis Vaccination Guidelines for Chronic Liver Disease

PLoS One
[Accessed 27 July 2013]
http://www.plosone.org/

Research Article
Physicians Infrequently Adhere to Hepatitis Vaccination Guidelines for Chronic Liver Disease
Kavitha Thudi, Dhiraj Yadav, Kaitlyn Sweeney, Jaideep Behari mail
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0071124

Abstract
Background and Goals
Hepatitis A (HAV) and hepatitis B (HBV) vaccination in patients with chronic liver disease is an accepted standard of care. We determined HAV and HBV vaccination rates in a tertiary care referral hepatology clinic and the impact of electronic health record (EHR)-based reminders on adherence to vaccination guidelines.

Methods
We reviewed the records of 705 patients with chronic liver disease referred to our liver clinic in 2008 with at least two follow-up visits during the subsequent year. Demographics, referral source, etiology, and hepatitis serology were recorded. We determined whether eligible patients were offered vaccination and whether patients received vaccination. Barriers to vaccination were determined by a follow-up telephone interview.

Results
HAV and HBV serologic testing prior to referral and at the liver clinic were performed in 14.5% and 17.7%; and 76.7% and 74% patients, respectively. Hepatologists recommended vaccination for HAV in 63% and for HBV in 59.7% of eligible patients. Patient demographics or disease etiology did not influence recommendation rates. Significant variability was observed in vaccination recommendation amongst individual providers (30–98.6%), which did not correlate with the number of patients seen by each physician. Vaccination recommendation rates were not different for Medicare patients with hepatitis C infection for whom a vaccination reminder was automatically generated by the EHR. Most patients who failed to get vaccination after recommendation offered no specific reason for noncompliance; insurance was a barrier in a minority.

Conclusions
Hepatitis vaccination rates were suboptimal even in an academic, sub-speciality setting, with wide-variability in provider adherence to vaccination guidelines.

Targeting Imperfect Vaccines against Drug-Resistance Determinants: A Strategy for Countering the Rise of Drug Resistan

PLoS One
[Accessed 27 July 2013]
http://www.plosone.org/

Research Article
Targeting Imperfect Vaccines against Drug-Resistance Determinants: A Strategy for Countering the Rise of Drug Resistance
Regina Joice, Marc Lipsitch
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0068940

Abstract
The growing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance in major pathogens is outpacing discovery of new antimicrobial classes. Vaccines mitigate the effect of antimicrobial resistance by reducing the need for treatment, but vaccines for many drug-resistant pathogens remain undiscovered or have limited efficacy, in part because some vaccines selectively favor pathogen strains that escape vaccine-induced immunity. A strain with even a modest advantage in vaccinated hosts can have high fitness in a population with high vaccine coverage, which can offset a strong selection pressure such as antimicrobial use that occurs in a small fraction of hosts. We propose a strategy to target vaccines against drug-resistant pathogens, by using resistance-conferring proteins as antigens in multicomponent vaccines. Resistance determinants may be weakly immunogenic, offering only modest specific protection against resistant strains. Therefore, we assess here how varying the specific efficacy of the vaccine against resistant strains would affect the proportion of drug-resistant vs. –sensitive strains population-wide for three pathogens – Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and influenza virus – in which drug resistance is a problem. Notably, if such vaccines confer even slightly higher protection (additional efficacy between 1% and 8%) against resistant variants than sensitive ones, they may be an effective tool in controlling the rise of resistant strains, given current levels of use for many antimicrobial agents. We show that the population-wide impact of such vaccines depends on the additional effect on resistant strains and on the overall effect (against all strains). Resistance-conferring accessory gene products or resistant alleles of essential genes could be valuable as components of vaccines even if their specific protective effect is weak.

Recent Shifts in Global Governance: Implications for the Response to Non-communicable Diseases

PLoS Medicine
(Accessed 27 July 2013)
http://www.plosmedicine.org/

Policy Forum
Recent Shifts in Global Governance: Implications for the Response to Non-communicable Diseases
Devi Sridharl, Claire E. Brolan, Shireen Durrani, Jennifer Edge, Lawrence O. Gostin, Peter Hill, Martin McKee
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1001487

Summary Points
:: Despite evidence of links between non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and development, these diseases and their risk factors were not included in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
:: Three major trends in global governance—the rise of emerging economies, the increase in multi-bi financing, and institutional proliferation—have implications for whether NCDs will be included in the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) agenda.
:: While emerging economies are influential in global governance, it is not clear that the interests of poorer countries—or even health—will be advanced.
:: If NCDs are included in the new health goals, it likely will be via the broad umbrella of healthy life expectancy (HLE), or the sector-specific target of universal health coverage (UHC) or access.
:: UHC or HLE as currently conceived are unlikely to adequately incorporate NCDs that require alternative health system mechanisms and clear governmental intervention

Essay: Access to Drugs for Treatment of Noncommunicable Diseases

PLoS Medicine
(Accessed 27 July 2013)
http://www.plosmedicine.org/

Essay
Access to Drugs for Treatment of Noncommunicable Diseases
Thomas J. Bollyky
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1001485

Summary Points
:: A decade ago, the HIV/AIDS treatment-access crisis helped elevate infectious diseases as a foreign policy issue and mobilized billions in global health aid.
:: A new controversy over patented medicines and their affordability in developing countries is emerging, this time over noncommunicable diseases (NCDs).
:: Conflicts over patented NCD medications are likely to increase, with potential adverse consequences for patients, drug firms, and developed and developing country governments alike.
:: The intergovernmental institutions designated to address trade and global health concerns are unlikely to resolve these conflicts and alternatives to intellectual property have not attracted significant donor and multilateral support.
:: Addressing the NCD treatment-access crisis will require another transformation in global health, this time focusing on low-cost interventions and patient-centered, rather than country-focused, strategies.

Preventing Newborn Infection with Maternal Immunization

Science Translational Medicine
24 July 2013 vol 5, issue 195
http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/current

BACTERIAL DISEASE
Preventing Newborn Infection with Maternal Immunization
Steven Black, Immaculada Margarit, and Rino Rappuoli
24 July 2013: 195ps11
Abstract
Group B streptococcal disease is a common cause of bacterial sepsis in newborns and is often fatal. To protect these babies, a vaccination program must target pregnant women for immunization so that the resulting antibodies can be passively delivered from the mother to the fetus. Scientists met in Siena, Italy, to discuss potential approaches to maternal immunization for the prevention of perinatal group B streptococcal disease.

The marginal willingness-to-pay for attributes of a hypothetical HIV vaccine

Vaccine
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X
Volume 31, Issue 36, Pages 3637-3762 (12 August 2013)

The marginal willingness-to-pay for attributes of a hypothetical HIV vaccine
Original Research Article
Pages 3712-3717
Michael P. Cameron, Peter A. Newman, Surachet Roungprakhon, Riccardo Scarpa

Abstract
This paper estimates the marginal willingness-to-pay for attributes of a hypothetical HIV vaccine using discrete choice modeling. We use primary data from 326 respondents from Bangkok and Chiang Mai, Thailand, in 2008–2009, selected using purposive, venue-based sampling across two strata. Participants completed a structured questionnaire and full rank discrete choice modeling task administered using computer-assisted personal interviewing. The choice experiment was used to rank eight hypothetical HIV vaccine scenarios, with each scenario comprising seven attributes (including cost) each of which had two levels. The data were analyzed in two alternative specifications: (1) best-worst; and (2) full-rank, using logit likelihood functions estimated with custom routines in Gauss matrix programming language. In the full-rank specification, all vaccine attributes are significant predictors of probability of vaccine choice. The biomedical attributes of the hypothetical HIV vaccine (efficacy, absence of VISP, absence of side effects, and duration of effect) are the most important attributes for HIV vaccine choice. On average respondents are more than twice as likely to accept a vaccine with 99% efficacy, than a vaccine with 50% efficacy. This translates to a willingness to pay US$383 more for a high efficacy vaccine compared with the low efficacy vaccine. Knowledge of the relative importance of determinants of HIV vaccine acceptability is important to ensure the success of future vaccination programs. Future acceptability studies of hypothetical HIV vaccines should use more finely grained biomedical attributes, and could also improve the external validity of results by including more levels of the cost attribute.

Systematic review of economic evaluation analyses of available vaccines in Spain from 1990 to 2012

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 35, Pages 3461-3636 (2 August 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/31/35
Systematic review of economic evaluation analyses of available vaccines in Spain from 1990 to 2012

Review Article
Pages 3473-3484
Isabel Cortés, Santiago Pérez-Camarero, Juan del Llano, Luz María Peña, Álvaro Hidalgo-Vega
Abstract
Objective
The objective of this survey was to describe the evolution of economic evaluation studies on vaccines available in Spain.

Methods
We conducted a systematic review of the economic evaluations published by Spanish researchers in major bibliographic databases available online from 1990 to 2012. For all references identified, we limited them to full economic evaluation carried out in Spanish vaccine programs. The following variables were analyzed: type of study, year of publication, vaccine evaluated, the herd immunity and the main methodological aspects proposed by international guidelines. The type of vaccines studied were Hepatitis A and B, Rotavirus, Influenza, Varicella, Tetanus, Measles, Human papillomavirus, Streptococcus pneumoniae infection and Neisseria meningitides serogroup C infection.

Results
A total of 34 references was included in the study. The number of economic evaluations has been increasing over the years by 86%. For many of the vaccines there were no economic evaluations, while others such as the vaccine against S. pneumoniae infection took up most of the studies. The non-vaccinated comparison was the most used strategy. The cost-effectiveness model was selected in 60% of cases. The most common health outcome was “cost per case prevented” and in 82% of the studies did not consider herd immunity. The results showed a cost-effectiveness ratio which was below breakeven.

Conclusions
It is clear that the existence of a huge gap in this kind of work compared to other countries. Although the quality of the work discussed here was significant, we found many areas which could be improved. The reviewed literature exposed the great benefit of vaccination for society by analysing the health outcomes achieved for decades since its implementation. However, the evidence on the efficiency and effectiveness vaccination is not very high, and there are few studies about economic evaluation.

A brief history of the global effort to develop a preventive HIV vaccine

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 35, Pages 3461-3636 (2 August 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/31/35

A brief history of the global effort to develop a preventive HIV vaccine
Review Article
Pages 3502-3518
José Esparza

Abstract
Soon after HIV was discovered as the cause of AIDS in 1983–1984, there was an expectation that a preventive vaccine would be rapidly developed. In trying to achieve that goal, three successive scientific paradigms have been explored: induction of neutralizing antibodies, induction of cell mediated immunity, and exploration of combination approaches and novel concepts. Although major progress has been made in understanding the scientific basis for HIV vaccine development, efficacy trials have been critical in moving the field forward. In 2009, the field was reinvigorated with the modest results obtained from the RV144 trial conducted in Thailand. Here, we review those vaccine development efforts, with an emphasis on events that occurred during the earlier years. The goal is to provide younger generations of scientists with information and inspiration to continue the search for an HIV vaccine.

Roadmap for the international collaborative epidemiologic monitoring of safety and effectiveness of new high priority vaccines

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 35, Pages 3461-3636 (2 August 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/31/35

Roadmap for the international collaborative epidemiologic monitoring of safety and effectiveness of new high priority vaccines
Original Research Article – Brighton Collaboration papers
Pages 3623-3627
Hector S. Izurieta, Patrick Zuber, Jan Bonhoeffer, Robert T. Chen, Osman Sankohg, Kayla F. Laserson, Miriam Sturkenboom, Christian Loucq, Daniel Weibel, Caitlin Dodd, Steve Black

Abstract
With the advent of new vaccines targeted to highly endemic diseases in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) and with the expansion of vaccine manufacturing globally, there is an urgent need to establish an infrastructure to evaluate the benefit-risk profiles of vaccines in LMIC. Fortunately the usual decade(s)-long time gap between introduction of new vaccines in high and low income countries is being significantly reduced or eliminated due to initiatives such as the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations (GAVI) and the Decade of Vaccines for the implementation of the Global Vaccine Action Plan. While hoping for more rapid disease control, this time shift may potentially add risk, unless appropriate capacity for reliable and timely evaluation of vaccine benefit-risk profiles in some LMIC’s are developed with external assistance from regional or global level. An ideal vaccine safety and effectiveness monitoring system should be flexible and sustainable, able to quickly detect possible vaccine-associated events, distinguish them from programmatic errors, reliably and quickly evaluate the suspected event and its association with vaccination and, if associated, determine the benefit-risk of vaccines to inform appropriate action. Based upon the demonstrated feasibility of active surveillance in LMIC as shown by the Burkina Faso assessment of meningococcal A conjugate vaccine or that of rotavirus vaccine in Mexico and Brazil, and upon the proof of concept international GBS study, we suggest a sustainable, flexible, affordable and timely international collaborative vaccine safety monitoring approach for vaccines being newly introduced. While this paper discusses only the vaccine component, the same system could also be eventually used for monitoring drug effectiveness (including the use of substandard drugs) and drug safety.

A systematic review of safety data reporting in clinical trials of vaccines against malaria, tuberculosis, and human immunodeficiency virus

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 35, Pages 3461-3636 (2 August 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/31/35

A systematic review of safety data reporting in clinical trials of vaccines against malaria, tuberculosis, and human immunodeficiency virus
Original Research Article – Brighton Collaboration papers
Pages 3628-3635
Cindy Tamminga, Michael Kavanaugh, Charlotte Fedders, Santina Maiolatesi, Neethu Abraham, Jan Bonhoeffer, Ulrich Heininger, Carlos S. Vasquez, Vasee S. Moorthy, Judith E. Epstein, Thomas L. Richie

Abstract
Introduction
Malaria, tuberculosis (TB) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are diseases with devastating effects on global public health, especially in the developing world. Clinical trials of candidate vaccines for these diseases are being conducted at an accelerating rate, and require accurate and consistent methods for safety data collection and reporting. We performed a systematic review of publications describing the safety results from clinical trials of malaria, TB and HIV vaccines, to ascertain the nature and consistency of safety data collection and reporting.

Methods
The target for the review was pre-licensure trials for malaria, TB and HIV vaccines published in English from 2000 to 2009. Search strategies were customized for each of the databases utilized (MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the Database of Reviews and Effects). Data extracted included age of trial participants, vaccine platform, route and method of vaccine administration, duration of participant follow-up, reporting of laboratory abnormalities, and the type, case definitions, severity, reporting methods and internal reporting consistency of adverse events.

Results
Of 2278 publications screened, 124 were eligible for inclusion (malaria: 66, TB: 9, HIV: 49). Safety data reporting was found to be highly variable among publications and often incomplete: overall, 269 overlapping terms were used to describe specific adverse events. 17% of publications did not mention fever. Descriptions of severity or degree of relatedness to immunization of adverse events were frequently omitted. 26% (32/124) of publications failed to report data on serious adverse events.

Conclusions
The review demonstrated lack of standardized safety data reporting in trials for vaccines against malaria, TB and HIV. Standardization of safety data collection and reporting should be encouraged to improve data quality and comparability.

Limitations
The search strategy missed studies published in languages other than English and excluded studies reporting on vaccine trials for diseases besides malaria, TB and HIV.

A Multidisciplinary Research Agenda for Understanding Vaccine-Related Decisions

Vaccines — Open Access Journal
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/vaccines
Vaccines (ISSN 2076-393X), an international open access journal, is published by MDPI online quarterly. The first issue will be released in 2013.\
.
A Multidisciplinary Research Agenda for Understanding Vaccine-Related Decisions
Heidi Larson, Julie Leask, Sian Aggett, Nick Sevdalis and Angus Thomson
Vaccines 2013, 1(3), 293-304; doi:10.3390/vaccines1030293 – published online 18 July 2013
Abstract: There is increasingly broad global recognition of the need to better understand determinants of vaccine acceptance. Fifteen social science, communication, health, and medical professionals (the “Motors of Trust in Vaccination” (MOTIV) think tank) explored factors relating to vaccination decision-making as a step to building a multidisciplinary research agenda. One hundred and forty seven factors impacting decisions made by consumers, professionals, and policy makers on vaccine acceptance, delay, or refusal were identified and grouped into three major categories: cognition and decision-making; groups and social norms; and communication and engagement. These factors should help frame a multidisciplinary research agenda to build an evidence base on the determinants of vaccine acceptance to inform the development of interventions and vaccination policies.

Post Approval Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Uptake Is Higher in Minorities Compared to Whites in Girls Presenting for Well-Child Care

Vaccines — Open Access Journal
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/vaccines
Vaccines (ISSN 2076-393X), an international open access journal, is published by MDPI online quarterly. The first issue will be released in 2013.

Post Approval Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Uptake Is Higher in Minorities Compared to Whites in Girls Presenting for Well-Child Care
Jennifer Young Pierce 1,*, Jeffrey E. Korte 2, Laura A. Carr 3, Catherine B. Gasper 1 and Susan C. Modesitt 4
Vaccines 2013, 1, 250-261; doi:10.3390/vaccines1030250
Abstract: Since introduction of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, there remains low uptake compared to other adolescent vaccines. There is limited information postapproval about parental attitudes and barriers when presenting for routine care. This study evaluates HPV vaccine uptake and assesses demographics and attitudes correlating with vaccination for girls aged 11–12 years. A prospective cohort study was performed utilizing the University of Virginia (UVA) Clinical Data Repository (CDR). The CDR was used to identify girls aged 11–12 presenting to any UVA practice for a well-child visit between May 2008 and April 2009. Billing data were searched to determine rates of HPV vaccine uptake. The parents of all identified girls were contacted four to seven months after the visit to complete a telephone questionnaire including insurance information, child’s vaccination status, HPV vaccine attitudes, and demographics. Five hundred and fifty girls were identified, 48.2% of whom received at least one HPV vaccine dose. White race and private insurance were negatively associated with HPV vaccine initiation (RR 0.72, Vaccines 2013, 1 251 95% CI 0.61–0.85 and RR 0.85, 95% CI 0.72–1.01, respectively). In the follow-up questionnaire, 242 interviews were conducted and included in the final cohort. In the sample, 183 (75.6%) parents reported white race, 38 (15.7%) black race, and 27 (11.2%) reported other race. Overall 85% of parents understood that the HPV vaccine was recommended and 58.9% of parents believed the HPV vaccine was safe. In multivariate logistic regression, patients of black and other minority races were 4.9 and 4.2 times more likely to receive the HPV vaccine compared to their white counterparts. Safety concerns were the strongest barrier to vaccination. To conclude, HPV vaccine uptake was higher among minority girls and girls with public insurance in this cohort.

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary [to 27 July 2013]

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary
.
Sociocultural Determinants of Anticipated Vaccine Acceptance for Acute Watery Diarrhea in Early Childhood in Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of Congo
Sonja Merten*, Christian Schaetti, Cele Manianga, Bruno Lapika, Raymond Hutubessy, Claire-Lise Chaignat and Mitchell Weiss
+ Author Affiliations
Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland; Anthropologie, Université de Kinshasa, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo; Initiative for Vaccine Research and Global Task Force on Cholera Control, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
2013 12-0643
Published online July 22, 2013
doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.12-0643
http://www.ajtmh.org/content/early/2013/07/18/ajtmh.12-0643.abstract
Abstract
Rotavirus and oral cholera vaccines have the potential to reduce diarrhea-related child mortality in low-income settings and are recommended by the World Health Organization. Uptake of vaccination depends on community support, and is based on local priorities. This study investigates local perceptions of acute watery diarrhea in childhood and anticipated vaccine acceptance in two sites in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 2010, 360 randomly selected non-affected adults were interviewed by using a semi-structured questionnaire. Witchcraft and breastfeeding were perceived as potential cause of acute watery diarrhea by 51% and 48% of respondents. Despite misperceptions, anticipated vaccine acceptance at no cost was 99%. The strongest predictor of anticipated vaccine acceptance if costs were assumed was the educational level of the respondents. Results suggest that the introduction of vaccines is a local priority and local (mis)perceptions of illness do not compromise vaccine acceptability if the vaccine is affordable

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Influenza vaccination for healthcare workers who care for people aged 60 or older living in long‐term care institutions
Roger E Thomas1,*, Tom Jefferson2, Toby J Lasserson3
The Cocchran Librrary
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD005187.pub4/abstract
Editorial Group: Cochrane Acute Respiratory Infections Group
Published Online: 22 JUL 2013
Abstract
Background
Healthcare workers’ influenza rates are unknown but may be similar to those of the general public. Healthcare workers may transmit influenza to patients.
Objectives
To identify all randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and non-RCTs assessing the effects of vaccinating healthcare workers on the incidence of laboratory-proven influenza, pneumonia, death from pneumonia and admission to hospital for respiratory illness in those aged 60 years or older resident in long-term care institutions (LTCIs).
Search methods
We searched CENTRAL 2013, Issue 2, MEDLINE (1966 to March week 3, 2013), EMBASE (1974 to March 2013), Biological Abstracts (1969 to March 2013), Science Citation Index-Expanded (1974 to March 2013) and Web of Science (2006 to March 2013).
Selection criteria
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and non-RCTs of influenza vaccination of healthcare workers caring for individuals aged 60 years or older in LTCIs and the incidence of laboratory-proven influenza and its complications (lower respiratory tract infection, or hospitalisation or death due to lower respiratory tract infection) in individuals aged 60 years or older in LTCIs.
Data collection and analysis
Two authors independently extracted data and assessed risk of bias.
Main results
We identified four cluster-RCTs (C-RCTs) (n = 7558) and one cohort study (n = 12,742) of influenza vaccination for HCWs caring for individuals ≥ 60 years in LTCFs. Three RCTs (5896 participants) provided outcome data that met our criteria. These three studies were comparable in study populations, intervention and outcome measures. The studies did not report adverse events. The principal sources of bias in the studies related to attrition and blinding. The pooled risk difference (RD) from the three cluster-RCTs for laboratory-proven influenza was 0 (95% confidence interval (CI) -0.03 to 0.03) and for hospitalisation was RD 0 (95% CI -0.02 to 0.02). The estimated risk of death due to lower respiratory tract infection was also imprecise (RD -0.02, 95% CI -0.06 to 0.02) in individuals aged 60 years or older in LTCIs. Adjusted analyses which took into account the cluster design did not differ substantively from the pooled analysis with unadjusted data.
Authors’ conclusions
The results for specific outcomes: laboratory-proven influenza or its complications (lower respiratory tract infection, or hospitalisation or death due to lower respiratory tract illness) did not identify a benefit of healthcare worker vaccination on these key outcomes. This review did not find information on co-interventions with healthcare worker vaccination: hand-washing, face masks, early detection of laboratory-proven influenza, quarantine, avoiding admissions, antivirals and asking healthcare workers with influenza or influenza-like-illness (ILI) not to work.     This review does not provide reasonable evidence to support the vaccination of healthcare workers to prevent influenza in those aged 60 years or older resident in LTCIs. High-quality RCTs are required to avoid the risks of bias in methodology and conduct identified by this review and to test further these interventions in combination.
Plain language summary
Influenza vaccination for healthcare workers who care for people aged 60 or older living in long-term care institutions
Older individuals in long-term care institutions (LTCIs) at risk of influenza may be infected by their healthcare workers. There are no accurate data on rates of laboratory-proven influenza in healthcare workers. Vaccinating healthcare workers against influenza may reduce infections acquired from this source. Because the signs and symptoms of influenza are similar to those of many other respiratory illnesses, it is important in studies testing the effects of influenza vaccination to prove by laboratory tests which are highly accurate whether residents in LTCIs actually have influenza or another respiratory illness.
Three randomised controlled trials (RCTs) (5896 participants) provided outcome data meeting our criteria. For risk of bias: randomisation was at low risk in two trials and unclear in one; allocation concealment and blinding in all three trials was unclear; incomplete outcome data in one trial was at low risk and in two at high risk; selective reporting all three trials was at low risk; performance bias (incomplete influenza vaccination of healthcare workers in the intervention arms) in all three trials was at high risk. No studies reported on adverse events. Vaccinating healthcare workers who care for those aged 60 or over in LTCIs showed no effect on laboratory-proven influenza or complications (lower respiratory tract infection, hospitalisation or death due to lower respiratory tract illness) in those aged 60 or over resident in LTCIs.
This review did not find information on other interventions used in conjunction with vaccinating healthcare workers (hand-washing, face masks, early detection of laboratory-proven influenza, quarantine, avoiding new admissions, prompt use of antivirals and asking healthcare workers with an influenza-like illness not to work.
There is no evidence that only vaccinating healthcare workers prevents laboratory-proven influenza or its complications (lower respiratory tract infection, hospitalisation or death due to lower respiratory tract infection) in individuals aged 60 or over in LTCIs and thus no evidence to mandate compulsory vaccination of healthcare workers. Other interventions, such as hand-washing, masks, early detection of influenza with nasal swabs, antivirals, quarantine, restricting visitors and asking healthcare workers with an influenza-like illness not to attend work, might protect individuals over 60 in LTCIs. High-quality randomised controlled trials testing combinations of these interventions are needed.

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Providers lack of knowledge about herpes zoster in HIV-infected patients is among barriers to herpes zoster vaccination
M Aziz, MD, H Kessler, MD, G Huhn, MD MPH&TM
Rush University Medical Center/John H Stroger Hospital of Cook County, Chicago, IL, USA
Correspondence to:
M Aziz MD, Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Rush University Medical Center, 600 S. Paulina Street, Suites 140143, Chicago, IL, USA Email: Mariam_Aziz@rush.edu
http://std.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/07/17/0956462412472461.abstract
Abstract
Identification of perceptions about herpes zoster (HZ) disease, vaccine effectiveness and safety, and vaccine recommendations may impact immunization practices of physicians for HIV-infected patients. A survey was used to quantify knowledge of HZ as well as determine physician immunization perceptions and practices. There were 272/1700 respondents (16). Correct answers for the incidence of varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection in adults and incidence of HZ in HIV-infected patients were recorded by 14 and 10 of providers, respectively. Providers reported poor knowledge of the incidence of disease recurrence in HIV-infected patients (41 correct), potency of HZ vaccine (47.5 correct) and mechanism of protection against reactivation of VZV (66 correct). Most (88) agreed that HZ was a serious disease, and 73 believed that the burden of disease made vaccination important. A majority (75) did not vaccinate HIV patients with HZ vaccine regardless of antiretroviral therapy status. Barriers to administration included safety concerns, concern that vaccine would not prevent HZ, risk of HZ dissemination, reimbursement issues and lack of Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) guidelines. Only 38 of providers agreed that CDC guidelines were clear and 50 believed that clinical trials were needed prior to use of HZ vaccine in HIV-infected patients. Education about HZ is needed among HIV providers. Providers perceived vaccination as important, but data on vaccine safety and clear guidance from the CDC on this issue are lacking.

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[HTML] High HIV-1 prevalence, risk behaviours, and willingness to participate in HIV vaccine trials in fishing communities on Lake Victoria, Uganda
N Kiwanuka, A Ssetaala, J Mpendo, M Wambuzi… – Journal of the International …, 2013
Abstract Introduction: HIV epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa are generalized, but high-risk subgroups exist within these epidemics. A recent study among fisher-folk communities (FFC) in Uganda showed high HIV prevalence (28.8%) and incidence (4.9/100 person-years).

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Selected Newsletters
RotaFlash (PATH) – July 22, 2013
http://vad.createsend1.com/t/r-e-btkqdy-mhyjuirjk-j/

Polio vaccines – Injecting competition [Serum Institute]

Economist
http://www.economist.com/
Accessed 27 July 2013

Polio vaccines
Injecting competition
Jul 19th 2013, 11:27 by E.C. | PUNE
http://www.economist.com/blogs/feastandfamine/2013/07/polio-vaccines

Excerpt
WILL the world eradicate polio? If it does, some of the credit may go to a 73-year-old billionaire horse-breeder from the Indian city of Pune: he wants to provide injectable polio vaccine at a loss—at least for some time.

The world has made much progress in the fight against polio, a dreaded disease which leaves infected children paralysed. India is a good example. In 1985 the country counted more than 150,000 cases. Next January, after three years without a new case, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative will formally declare India polio-free.

The effort to get there has been monumental. During India’s National Immunisation Day, for instance, more than 2.5m volunteers inoculate over 170m children under the age of five. Since each child receives two drops of the vaccine, an astonishing 340m drops of oral polio vaccine (OPV), a vaccine developed in the 1950s by Albert Sabin, a Polish-American scientist, is needed.

Given such massive quantities, pharmaceutical companies such as GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi Pasteur, have been able to keep the prices of the polio vaccine low. A two-drop dose of OPV costs between $0.10 and $0.13.

But the injectable polio vaccine (IPV) is a better way to inoculate children against the disease: it is safer because it does not carry the live virus. Unhappily, it is also more expensive. Still, nearly 140 countries, including India, will be relying on the IPV in the coming years, says Apoorva Mallya of Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The shift to IPV is a key part of the endgame in the fight against polio.

This is where Cyrus Poonawalla, the billionaire horse-breeder, comes in. He is the founder and chief executive of the Serum Institute. Although it is lesser known than its European and American competitors—GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi-Aventis, Merck and Novartis—the firm is the world’s number one producer of measles and DTP (diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis) vaccines. Globally, two of three children receive a Serum vaccine, according to some estimates…

Vaccines: The Week in Review 20 July 2013

Vaccines: The Week in Review is a weekly digest — summarizing news, events, announcements, peer-reviewed articles and research in the global vaccine ethics and policy space. Content is aggregated from key governmental, NGO, international organization and industry sources, key peer-reviewed journals, and other media channels. This summary proceeds from the broad base of themes and issues monitored by the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy in its work: it is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. You are viewing the blog version of our weekly digest, typically comprised of between 30 and 40 posts below all dated “29 June 2013″
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Email Summary: Vaccines: The Week in Review is published as a single email summary, scheduled for release each Saturday eveningbefore midnight (EDT in the U.S.). If you would like to receive the email version, please send your request to david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org.
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pdf version: A pdf of the current issues is available here: Vaccines_The Week in Review_20 July 2013
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Twitter: Readers can also follow developments on twitter: @vaxethicspolicy.
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Links: We endeavor to test each link as we incorporate it into any post, but recognize that some links may become “stale” as publications and websites reorganize content over time. We apologize in advance for any links that may not be operative. We believe the contextual information in a given post should allow retrieval, but please contact us as above for assistance if necessary.
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Support: If you would like to join the growing list of individuals who support this service and its contribution to their roles in public health, clinical practice, government, IGOs/NGOs, research, industry and academia, please visit this page at The Wistar Institute, our co-founder and fiduciary. Thank you…
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David R. Curry, MS
Executive Director
Center for Vaccine Ethics and Policy
a program of the
– Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Medical School
– The Wistar Institute Vaccine Center
– Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Vaccine Education Center
Associate Faculty, Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Medical School

– email: david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org

Sabin PDP launches soil-transmitted helminth (STH) vaccine discovery program

The Sabin Vaccine Institute Product Development Partnership (Sabin PDP) announced the launch of a soil-transmitted helminth (STH) vaccine discovery program.  The new Sabin PDP is supported by the Gary Karlin Michelson, M.D. Charitable Foundation, and will be based at the Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital. The program “will endeavor to advance lead candidate antigens for ascariasis (roundworm) and trichuriasis (whipworm) infections and incorporate them into existing hookworm and schistosomiasis vaccines currently being developed by the Sabin PDP to create a vaccine against all four major human helminth infections.” Sabin noted that ascariasis, an infection of the small intestine, afflicts an estimated 800-900 million people and is a significant cause of acute intestinal obstruction in young children with high worm loads, leading to thousands of deaths annually. Trichuriasis, an infection of the large intestine, affects approximately 500 million people and is arguably the primary cause of inflammatory bowel disease in developing countries.

http://www.sabin.org/updates/pressreleases/sabin-vaccine-institute-begins-new-vaccine-discovery-initiative

DFID: Multilateral Aid Review (MAR) update confirms GAVI as a highly effective organisation

DFID:  Multilateral Aid Review (MAR) update confirms GAVI as a highly effective organisation
Excerpt
Geneva, 18 July 2013 – The UK Department for International Development (DFID) today confirmed that the GAVI Alliance remains a highly effective organisation that is making progress on areas for improvement highlighted by the UK. DFID’s follows the 2011 MAR which found GAVI to be “very good value for money for UK aid”. The MAR update enables the UK Government to assess international organisations on progress made against the reforms proposed in the 2011 MAR. Progress made in all areas for reform “demonstrates GAVI’s on-going commitment to improvement,” DFID said. The MAR update also found that GAVI provides “highly cost-effective health interventions” and has “effective financial oversight” of its programmes.

http://www.gavialliance.org/library/news/statements/2013/uk-government-recognises-gavi-s-progress/

WHO Statement: Second Meeting of the IHR Emergency Committee concerning MERS-CoV – PHEIC Conditions Not Met

WHO Statement: Second Meeting of the IHR Emergency Committee concerning MERS-CoV
17 July 2013
[Full text, editor’s bolding of selected text]

The second meeting of the Emergency Committee convened by the Director-General under the International Health Regulations (2005) [IHR (2005)] was held by teleconference on Wednesday, 17 July 2013, from 12:00 to 16:04 Geneva time (CET).

In addition to Members of the Emergency Committee, an expert advisor to the Committee1 participated in the meeting. During the informational session of the meeting, several affected States Parties were also on the teleconference. The States Parties on the teleconference were: France, Germany, Italy, Jordan, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Tunisia, and the United Kingdom.

The Committee reviewed and deliberated on information on a range of aspects of MERS-CoV, which was prepared or coordinated by the Secretariat and States in response to questions presented by Members during the first meeting.

   It is the unanimous decision of the Committee that, with the information now available, and using a risk-assessment approach, the conditions for a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) have not at present been met.

While not considering the events currently to constitute a PHEIC, Members of the Committee did offer technical advice for consideration by WHO and Member States on a broad range of issues, including the following:
–       Improvements in surveillance, lab capacity, contact tracing and serological investigation
–       Infection prevention and control and clinical management
–       Travel-related guidance
–       Risk communications
–       Research studies (epidemiological, clinical and animal)
–       Improved data collection and the need to ensure full and timely reporting of all confirmed and probable cases of MERS-CoV to WHO in accordance with the IHR (2005).

The WHO Secretariat will provide regular updates to the Members and will reconvene the Committee, in September, on a date to be determined. However, serious new developments may require an urgent re-convening of the Committee before then.

Based on these views and the currently available information, the Director-General accepted the Committee’s assessment that the current MERS-CoV situation is serious and of great concern, but does not constitute a PHEIC at this time.

The Director-General expressed her gratitude to the Committee on its wide range of advice on health actions for countries to implement, and advice on follow-up work by WHO.

Emergency Committee Members

http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2013/mers_cov_20130717/en/index.html

WHO: GAR – Disease Outbreak News MRS-CoV; Poliovirus [to 20 July 2013]

WHO: Global Alert and Response (GAR) – Disease Outbreak News
http://www.who.int/csr/don/2013_03_12/en/index.html

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) – update 18 July 2013
Excerpt
WHO has been informed of six additional laboratory-confirmed cases of infection with Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). Of these, two cases have been reported from Saudi Arabia and four from the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Both the cases in Saudi Arabia have mild symptoms and are not hospitalized. They are from Asir region. The first case is a 26-year-old man who is a close contact with a previously laboratory-confirmed case and the second case is a 42-year-old woman who is a health care worker.

In the UAE, the four cases are health care workers from two hospitals in Abu Dhabi who took care of an earlier laboratory-confirmed patient. Of these, two cases, a 28-year-old man and 30-year-old woman, did not develop symptoms of illness. The other two cases, both women of 30 and 40 years old, had mild upper respiratory symptoms and are in stable condition.

Globally, from September 2012 to date, WHO has been informed of a total of 88 laboratory-confirmed cases of infection with MERS-CoV, including 45 deaths…

Poliovirus detected from environmental samples in Israel – update 15 July 2013
Excerpt
Wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) has been isolated in 30 sewage samples from 10 sampling sites in Israel. The samples were collected from 3 February 2013 to 30 June 2013. Most positive WPV1 samples were detected from southern Israel. All viruses have been detected in sewage only; no cases of paralytic polio have been reported.

Detection of viruses across the country indicates increased geographic extent of circulation for a prolonged period of time. WHO assesses the risk of further international spread of WPV from Israel as moderate to high.

Health authorities in Israel are continuing to conduct a full epidemiological and public health investigation to actively search for potential cases of paralytic polio and any un-immunized persons. Routine immunization coverage is estimated at 94 percent or above over last eight years. The frequency of environmental surveillance sampling has been increased….

GPEI Update: Polio this week – As of 17 July 2013

Update: Polio this week – As of 17 July 2013
Global Polio Eradication Initiative
http://www.polioeradication.org/Dataandmonitoring/Poliothisweek.aspx
[Editor’s extract and bolded text]

:: The outbreak in the Horn of Africa is expanding, with 21 newly-reported cases (one from Kenya, 20 from Somalia). In Somalia, two immunization campaigns have been conducted since the most recent case occurred. Outbreak response activities are continuing, and planning and approaches continue to be strengthened. See ‘Horn of Africa’ section for more.

:: Update on WPV in environmental samples in Israel: WPV1 has now been isolated in 30 sewage samples from 10 sampling sites in Israel. The samples were collected between February and June 2013. All viruses have been detected in sewage only – no cases of paralytic polio have been reported. Health authorities in Israel are continuing to conduct a full epidemiological and public health investigation. The Government of Israel is planning supplementary immunization activities (SIAs) with OPV, to boost mucosal immunity levels to rapidly interrupt virus circulation. More.

Pakistan
:: Three new WPV cases were reported in the past week (WPV1s from Khyber Agency and North Waziristan, Federally Administered Tribal Areas – FATA, and in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa – KP), bringing the total number of WPV cases for 2013 to 21. The case from Peshawar is the most recent WPV in the country, and had onset of paralysis on 30 June…

:: …FATA is the major WPV1 reservoir in Pakistan at the moment. Bara in Khyber Agency is particularly affected. This outbreak is threatening progress achieved elsewhere in the country and in neighbouring Afghanistan.

:: In 2011 and 2012, Bara was the epicentre of a major outbreak which also spread to other areas.

:: The new case in North Waziristan is particularly concerning, as it is in an area where immunizations have been suspended by local leaders since last June. Immunizations in neighbouring high-risk areas are being intensified, to further boost population immunity levels in those areas and prevent further spread of this outbreak. North Waziristan is also affected by cVDPV2 cases.

:: Confirmation of these latest cases underscores the risk ongoing polio transmission (be it due to WPV or cVDPV) in the country continues to pose to children everywhere, and in particular to children living in areas where access has not been possible for extended periods of time.

Central Africa: Chad and Cameroon
:: In Chad, no new WPV cases were reported in the past week. The most recent WPV case had onset of paralysis on 14 June 2012 (WPV1 from Lac). No new cVDPV2 cases were reported in the past week. The total number of cVDPV2 cases for 2013 remains four (the most recent cVDPV2 case had onset of paralysis on 12 May from Ennedi).

:: In Cameroon, one new cVDPV2 case was reported in the past week, bringing the total number of cVDPV2 cases for 2013 to two. This latest case had onset of paralysis on 27 May, from Extreme-Nord. The first case had onset of paralysis on 9 May, also from Extreme-Nord.

:: Emergency outbreak response plans are currently being finalized in both countries. In Chad, nationwide campaigns were held on 23-26 June with trivalent OPV, with further campaigns planned in late July and in August. Cameroon will conduct its first round in the north of the country on 26-29 July with trivalent OPV, with further activities in August and September.

Horn of Africa
:: 21 new WPV1 cases were reported in the past week (one from Dadaab, Kenya, and 20 from Somalia), bringing the total number of WPV1 cases in the region to 73 (65 WPV1s from Somalia and eight WPV1s from Kenya). The most recent case in the region had onset of paralysis on 14 June (the newly-reported case from Kenya).

:: In Somalia, two immunization campaigns have been conducted since the most recent case occurred.

:: Some of the new cases are from inaccessible areas of south-central Somalia. More than 600,000 children are particularly vulnerable to polio in this area. Vaccination posts are being set up in areas bordering inaccessible areas to immunize all populations entering/leaving such areas (including targeting older age groups). Assessments of high-risk areas and populations continue to be conducted, including mapping chronic conflict-areas and major population movement routes. Local-level access negotiations have intensified, to increase access to populations in inaccessible areas.

:: Outbreak response across the Horn of Africa continues to be implemented. In Somalia, campaigns were held on 1-6 July. Planning is under way for NIDs during Ramadan on 21-24 July. Specific radio messages are being developed with the involvement of the Ministry of Religious Affairs.

WHO Report: Priority medicines for Europe and the World 2013 – update

WHO Report: Priority medicines for Europe and the World 2013 – update
Joint news release WHO/Geneva & WHO/EURO

Excerpt
16 July 2013 | GENEVA/COPENHAGEN – For the first time, EU countries have more people over 65 years of age than under 15 years of age. Echoing the trend seen in Europe, much of the rest of the world, including low-and middle-income countries, is moving in a similar direction. A new WHO report calls for pharmaceutical researchers to adjust their research and development efforts to account for this shifting demographic…

…The report, emphasizes that this shift in EU countries is ‘bell weather’ for the rest of the world as globally more people will be ageing and face similar health challenges in the future.

The report focuses on pharmaceutical ‘gaps’, where treatments for a disease or condition may soon become ineffective, are not appropriate for the target patient group, does not exist, or are not sufficiently effective.

“Despite an over three-fold rise in spending on pharmaceutical research and development in Europe since 1990, there is an increasing mismatch between people’s real needs and pharmaceutical innovation. We must ensure that industry develops safe, effective, affordable and appropriate medicines to meet future health needs,” says Nina Sautenkova, Health Technologies and Pharmaceuticals, WHO/Europe.

From a public health view, the trend of an increasing population over 65 leads to greater prevalence of diseases and conditions associated with ageing, such as heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, osteoarthritis, low-back pain, hearing loss, and Alzheimer disease. In combination with health promotion and disease prevention initiatives, these conditions also require more investment in research and innovation to bridge the pharmaceutical gaps.

:: Master document – 2013 Update Report
pdf, 5.09Mb

:: Presentation, Brussels, July 9th 2013

http://www.who.int/medicines/areas/priority_medicines/en/index.html

Can informal social distancing interventions minimize demand for antiviral treatment during a severe pandemic?

BMC Public Health
(Accessed 20 July 2013)
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpublichealth/content

Research article
Can informal social distancing interventions minimize demand for antiviral treatment during a severe pandemic?
Amy L Greer
BMC Public Health 2013, 13:669 doi:10.1186/1471-2458-13-669
Published: 18 July 2013
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/13/669/abstract

Abstract (provisional)
Background
In the case of a pandemic, individuals may alter their behaviour. A dynamic model incorporating social distancing can provide a mechanism to consider complex scenarios to support decisions regarding antiviral stockpile size while considering uncertainty around behavioural interventions. We have examined the impact of social distancing measures on the demand for limited healthcare resources such as antiviral drugs from a central stockpile during a severe pandemic.

Methods
We used an existing age-structured model for pandemic influenza in Canada and biologically plausible scenarios for severe influenza transmission within the population. We incorporated data from published reports regarding stated intentions to change behaviour during a pandemic as well as the magnitude and duration of time that individuals expected to maintain the behavioural change. We ran simulations for all combinations of parameter values to identify the projected antiviral requirements in each scenario.

Results
With 12 weeks of distancing, the effect is relatively small for the lowest R0 of 1.6 with a projected stockpile to treat 25.6% being required (IQR = 21.7 — 28.7%) unless the proportion of people involved (81%) and magnitude of the behaviour change is large (69% reduction in contacts). If 24 weeks of distancing occurs, with only a low to moderate reduction in contacts (38% or less), it is not possible to bring treatment requirements below 20% regardless of what proportion of the population engages in distancing measures when transmissibility is high (R0 = 2.0; stockpile size = 31%, IQR = 29.2 — 33.5%).

Conclusions
Our results demonstrate that the magnitude and duration of social distancing behaviours during a severe pandemic have an impact on the need for antiviral drugs. However, significant investments over a long period of time (>16 weeks) are required to decrease the need for antiviral treatment to below 10% of the total population for a highly transmissible viral strain (R0 > 1.8). Encouraging individuals to adopt behaviours that decrease their daily contact rate can help to control the spread of the virus until a vaccine becomes available however; relying on these measures to justify stockpiling fewer courses of treatment will not be sufficient in the case of a severe pandemic.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

JAMA: West Nile Virus

JAMA   
July 17, 2013, Vol 310, No. 3
http://jama.ama-assn.org/current.dtl

The 2012 West Nile Encephalitis Epidemic in Dallas, Texas FREE
Wendy M. Chung, MD, SM; Christen M. Buseman, PhD, MPH; Sibeso N. Joyner, MPH; Sonya M. Hughes, MPH; Thomas B. Fomby, PhD; James P. Luby, MD; Robert W. Haley, MD
Includes: Supplemental Content

Review
West Nile Virus: Review of the Literature
Lyle R. Petersen, MD, MPH; Aaron C. Brault, PhD; Roger S. Nasci, PhD

Burden and aetiology of diarrhoeal disease in infants and young children in developing countries (the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, GEMS): a prospective, case-control study

The Lancet  
Jul 20, 2013  Volume 382  Number 9888  p181 – 284  e1
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

Burden and aetiology of diarrhoeal disease in infants and young children in developing countries (the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, GEMS): a prospective, case-control study
Karen L Kotloff, James P Nataro, William C Blackwelder, Dilruba Nasrin, Tamer H Farag, Sandra Panchalingam, Yukun Wu, Samba O Sow, Dipika Sur, Robert F Breiman, Abu SG Faruque, Anita KM Zaidi, Debasish Saha, Pedro L Alonso, Boubou Tamboura, Doh Sanogo, Uma Onwuchekwa, Byomkesh Manna, Thandavarayan Ramamurthy, Suman Kanungo, John B Ochieng, Richard Omore, Joseph O Oundo, Anowar Hossain, Sumon K Das, Shahnawaz Ahmed, Shahida Qureshi, Farheen Quadri, Richard A Adegbola, Martin Antonio, M Jahangir Hossain, Adebayo Akinsola, Inacio Mandomando, Tacilta Nhampossa, Sozinho Acácio, Kousick Biswas, Ciara E O’Reilly, Eric D Mintz, Lynette Y Berkeley, Khitam Muhsen, Halvor Sommerfelt, Roy M Robins-Browne, Myron M Levine
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736%2813%2960844-2/abstract

Summary
Background
Diarrhoeal diseases cause illness and death among children younger than 5 years in low-income countries. We designed the Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS) to identify the aetiology and population-based burden of paediatric diarrhoeal disease in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia.

Methods
The GEMS is a 3-year, prospective, age-stratified, matched case-control study of moderate-to-severe diarrhoea in children aged 0—59 months residing in censused populations at four sites in Africa and three in Asia. We recruited children with moderate-to-severe diarrhoea seeking care at health centres along with one to three randomly selected matched community control children without diarrhoea. From patients with moderate-to-severe diarrhoea and controls, we obtained clinical and epidemiological data, anthropometric measurements, and a faecal sample to identify enteropathogens at enrolment; one follow-up home visit was made about 60 days later to ascertain vital status, clinical outcome, and interval growth.

Findings
We enrolled 9439 children with moderate-to-severe diarrhoea and 13 129 control children without diarrhoea. By analysing adjusted population attributable fractions, most attributable cases of moderate-to-severe diarrhoea were due to four pathogens: rotavirus, Cryptosporidium, enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli producing heat-stable toxin (ST-ETEC; with or without co-expression of heat-labile enterotoxin), and Shigella. Other pathogens were important in selected sites (eg, Aeromonas, Vibrio cholerae O1, Campylobacter jejuni). Odds of dying during follow-up were 8·5-fold higher in patients with moderate-to-severe diarrhoea than in controls (odd ratio 8·5, 95% CI 5·8—12·5, p<0·0001); most deaths (167 [87·9%]) occurred during the first 2 years of life. Pathogens associated with increased risk of case death were ST-ETEC (hazard ratio [HR] 1·9; 0·99—3·5) and typical enteropathogenic E coli (HR 2·6; 1·6—4·1) in infants aged 0—11 months, and Cryptosporidium (HR 2·3; 1·3—4·3) in toddlers aged 12—23 months.

Interpretation
Interventions targeting five pathogens (rotavirus, Shigella, ST-ETEC, Cryptosporidium, typical enteropathogenic E coli) can substantially reduce the burden of moderate-to-severe diarrhoea. New methods and accelerated implementation of existing interventions (rotavirus vaccine and zinc) are needed to prevent disease and improve outcomes.

Funding
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Nature Editorial: Parents should vaccinate their children against human papillomavirus.

Nature   
Volume 499 Number 7458 pp253-374  18 July 2013
http://www.nature.com/nature/current_issue.html

Editorial
Active protection
Parents should vaccinate their children against human papillomavirus.
17 July 2013

Scientists at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, announced good news last month. The prevalence of key strains of disease-causing human papilloma­virus (HPV) fell by 56% in US girls aged 14–19 years in the years after 2006, when a vaccine was added to the routine US immunization schedule for girls (L. E. Markowitz et al. J. Infect. Dis. 208, 385–393; 2013).

This is a clear-cut vaccine success story. The decline represents a drop from more than 1 in 10 girls in this age range carrying the relevant strains of the virus to just 1 in 20. This is a significant result. About 14 million people in the United States, most in their late teens and early 20s, become infected with HPV each year. The two most dangerous strains — those targeted by vaccines made by both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline — cause cervical cancer, other anogenital cancers and throat cancer. Merck’s vaccine also protects against two further strains that cause genital warts.

The vaccine is given in three doses over six months. The CDC first recommended that all girls aged 11 and 12 be vaccinated. In 2011, it said the same for boys, for whom only the Merck vaccine is licensed. The idea is to immunize children before they become sexually active. Given that HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease, waiting longer only increases the odds that the protection will be provided too late. The vaccine has been shown to be both safe and highly effective, and continuing experience — as of March, about 56 million doses had been distributed in the United States — reinforces that.

Yet proportional uptake in the United States has been poor. In 2010, a national survey found that only 49% of girls aged 13 to 17 had received at least one dose of vaccine, and only 32% had received all three doses. By comparison, Rwanda has achieved more than 80% vaccination coverage and several Canadian provinces have reached 85%.

“HPV is an equal-opportunity infectious agent.”

It is possible that unvaccinated girls in the United States are already benefiting from the compliance of the parents who have stepped up to have their children immunized. When the CDC scientists explored whether the decrease in HPV prevalence among 14–19-year-old girls might be due to herd immunity, they found that vaccinated sexually active girls showed a striking 88% decrease in prevalence of the relevant HPV strains, compared with the pre-vaccine era. But they also found a 28% decrease in prevalence among unvaccinated girls. The finding was not statistically significant, and was difficult to interpret owing to differences in the reported sexual behaviour of the two groups — for instance, the unvaccinated girls reported fewer sexual partners. Nevertheless, herd immunity is a possible explanation, and other studies have indicated that it is at play.

It is worth noting that cervical cancer, almost all of which is caused by HPV, disproportionately affects black and Hispanic women in the United States, possibly because they have reduced access to screening. And among women who do contract cervical cancer, black women have proportionally the highest death rate.

But neither white people nor parents of boys of any race or ethnicity should be complacent when considering whether to vaccinate. The vaccine is not only about preventing cervical cancer, nor even only about preventing anal cancer in males who have sex with males. Consider that the proportion of US throat cancers associated with HPV has exploded in recent decades among white men and women. (Similar increases have occurred in Canada and some European countries.) As the actor Michael Douglas was frank enough to acknowledge in an interview published last month, throat cancer of the type that he was treated for in 2010 is caused by HPV contracted through oral sex. (Douglas’s representatives later denied that he had intended the statement to refer to his own particular case.)

The take-home message is that HPV is an equal-opportunity infectious agent. As the CDC noted when it announced the findings last month, cervical cancer is simply the most common among about 19,000 cases of cancer caused by HPV in US women each year, and throat cancer is the most frequent among 8,000 cases of such cancers in men. The costs are sobering: the CDC calculates, for instance, that 50,000 girls alive today who will get cervical cancer during their lifetimes would not have done so had the country quickly reached 80% vaccination rates.

Squeamishness among parents being asked to vaccinate 11-year-olds against a sexually transmitted disease is understandable. But in the face of such a clearly effective means of protecting our young people, ducking the issue, hoping for the best or relying on the responsible actions of others is not.

http://www.nature.com/news/active-protection-1.13387

Perspective: Communicating and Promoting Comparative-Effectiveness Research Findings

New England Journal of Medicine
July 18, 2013  Vol. 369 No. 3
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal

Perspective
Communicating and Promoting Comparative-Effectiveness Research Findings
Peter J. Neumann, Sc.D.
N Engl J Med 2013; 369:209-211July 18, 2013DOI: 10.1056/NEJMp1300312
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1300312
[Full text]

The comparative-effectiveness research (CER) movement has sparked an important debate about who may communicate research findings, for what purposes, and using what methodologic standards.1-3 CER is intended to inform discussions about what works in health care. Much of the information comes from research using retrospective databases and quasi-experimental designs rather than randomized clinical trials. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) prohibits drug companies from using such information to promote pharmaceuticals, requiring that promotions be supported by “substantial evidence” of purported effects (which generally means evidence from two well-controlled trials, though one randomized, controlled trial is permitted in certain circumstances).1,2

Pharmaceutical companies have complained about “asymmetry” between the strict rules for their industry and the absence of restrictions for other organizations — including public and private payers and agencies such as the new Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) — which are increasingly conducting CER and communicating its results.3 The counterargument is that permitting drug companies to freely promote CER findings, including those that don’t meet the substantial-evidence standard, opens the door for industry to mislead physicians and patients, potentially harming public health and safety.2 It would also remove incentives for companies to conduct confirmatory trials, effectively allowing them to circumvent the FDA requirements for drug approval.2 Moreover, there are existing channels for manufacturers to communicate CER findings, even if the data do not meet the substantial-evidence standard. For example, manufacturers can write letters to the editor in defense of public challenges, distribute peer-reviewed articles discussing unapproved uses (with certain restrictions), and respond to unsolicited requests for information.2 Industry representatives, however, respond that the rules for communication outside of the substantial-evidence standard are vague and that the lack of formal FDA guidance has restricted their actions.3

In part, the issue can be addressed with better standards for the conduct and translation of CER. FDA officials recently noted that such standards are a necessary prerequisite to ensuring that comparative-effectiveness information from observational studies will provide credible evidence.1 Several groups are developing standards for using observational data in CER and, more generally, for including nonrandomized studies in systematic reviews. Eventually, the FDA might be able to determine when such studies meet substantial-evidence requirements.2 But standards alone are unlikely to suffice. Though the field is improving, judging whether a study based on observational data is of high quality will always be challenging, given unmeasured confounders and investigator choices in design and analysis that can affect results.2 The advent of CER organizations such as the PCORI, which has a specific mandate to disseminate CER findings, calls for a more immediate response.

A possible step forward would be for Congress to broaden the scope of a legislative provision — Section 114 of the Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act of 1997 — that enables drug companies to promote information related to health care economics that conforms to a broader “competent and reliable scientific evidence” standard rather than the substantial-evidence criterion, as long as the targets of that promotion are restricted to formulary committees or similar entities and the information is directly related to approved indications (see tableEvidentiary Standards and Intended Audiences under Current Law and Proposed Expansion.).3,4 Extending Section 114 to include CER findings would permit pharmaceutical companies to promote the information using the competent-and-reliable standard, though only to organizations such as health plans. The FDA could use the Federal Trade Commission’s definition of competent and reliable scientific evidence, which encompasses evidence based on the expertise of relevant professionals using generally accepted procedures, rather than requiring two well-controlled trials.3

Expanding Section 114 in this way would reflect a grand bargain of sorts, providing a more flexible evidentiary framework for business-to-business communication of CER findings while retaining key protections. It would open the door to promotion of results from a wider range of CER studies, including those using observational data to draw inferences about patients, settings, and end points (e.g., adherence, hospitalizations) that are of interest to payers and are difficult or impossible for drug companies to include in registration trials.

Of course, the plan is not without risks. There remain concerns that allowing drug companies to promote information about end points that have not been adequately studied could still deceive intended audiences and remove incentives for companies to conduct randomized trials.    Historical examples of misleading industry marketing and selective reporting of clinical data are warnings to proceed with caution.2 The proposal presumes that health plans have the expertise and wherewithal to judge CER information, and the situation should be monitored. In addition, Section 114 has proved to be challenging to regulate and interpret. To date, the FDA has never released any guidance or taken any regulatory action on the matter.5

However, the plan would preserve key guardrails for public health. Promotion would be restricted to organizations that retain strong incentives to be informed and wary consumers of drug-company promotions and that increasingly employ their own experts, mine their own data, and request CER evidence from companies, sometimes in the form of dossiers using the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy Format for Formulary Submissions.4 The substantial-evidence standard would remain in place for industry promotion targeting physicians or consumers. Product manufacturers would retain powerful incentives to conduct trials on appropriate indications, populations, and comparators, because such research would provide them with labeled claims for general promotion. Furthermore, the new legislation requiring the FDA to regulate CER promotions according to the competent-and-reliable standard could include a directive to the agency to issue guidance about when such promotions amounted to non-misleading information, which would help advance the creation of standards for CER.

Other mechanisms for exchanging trusted information, such as peer-reviewed publications, would continue to exist, and the creation of additional ones should be encouraged, including government-supported academic detailing of CER findings and the development of ClinicalTrials.gov-type models for observational research (ideally, with FDA- and journal-imposed requirements that designs for observational studies be posted publicly before initiation of a study).2 The new law could also require disclaimer or disclosure statements when information does not constitute substantial evidence.3

The entire debate over the promotion of CER findings has also been thrown for a loop by a series of recent court decisions, including the December 2012 ruling in United States v. Caronia, in which the Second Circuit court overturned a conviction of a drug company sales representative for off-label promotion on the grounds that FDA prohibitions of such promotion infringed the individual’s First Amendment right to free speech. Caronia continues a judiciary trend toward broadening the definition of protected speech and holds that the government cannot restrict truthful, non-misleading off-label promotion. Conceivably, the FDA will have to establish on a case-by-case basis whether any CER promotion, regardless of its intended audience, is “truthful.” However, a great deal of uncertainty prevails, and it may be some time before there is clarity around the issue. In the meantime, expanding Section 114 to include CER could help Congress, the FDA, and perhaps even the Courts to consider and define more clearly the circumstances and audiences for which CER promotion can be truthful and non-misleading.

Varicella Disease in Beijing in the Era of Voluntary Vaccination, 2007 to 2010

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
August 2013 – Volume 32 – Issue 8  pp: A15-A16,e314-e347,805-929
http://journals.lww.com/pidj/pages/currenttoc.aspx

Varicella Disease in Beijing in the Era of Voluntary Vaccination, 2007 to 2010
Lu, Li; Wang, Chengbin; Suo, Luodan; Li, Juan; Liu, Weixiang; Pang, Xinghuo; Seward, Jane F.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 32(8):e314-e318, August 2013.
doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e31828d948b

Abstract:
Background: In China, varicella vaccine has been available in the private sector to children ≥12 months of age since 1998 with a single-dose indication. In December 2006, varicella became a notifiable disease in Beijing. We used surveillance data to describe varicella vaccine uptake from 2005 to 2010 and varicella epidemiology in Beijing from 2007 to 2010.

Methods: Limited sociodemographic and clinical information was available from the passive surveillance system. Varicella vaccine coverage was estimated for each year for children born between 2004 and 2008 using the number of children in the immunization registry of each birth year as the denominator without adjustment for history of varicella.

Results: Vaccine coverage increased within each birth cohort between 2005 and 2010. The coverage at 2 years of age increased from 62.4% in 2005 to 74.1% in 2010 and was 80.4% in children 3–6 years of age in 2010. Between 2007 and 2010, 15,544 to 18,256 varicella cases were reported annually with stable overall incidence (range: 1.0–1.1/1000 persons), but the incidence in children 1–4 years of age decreased significantly from 6.2 per 1000 children in 2007 to 4.4 per 1000 children in 2010 (P < 0.001). Among adults (≥20 years of age), there were significant increases in the number and proportion of cases from 2557 (16.5%) in 2007 to 4277 (23.4%) in 2010 (P < 0.001).

Conclusions: Moderately high 1-dose vaccine coverage in young children has been achieved with declining disease incidence, but varicella remains a common, seasonal disease in the population. Current epidemiology suggests that a government-funded varicella vaccine program that includes catch-up vaccination for older children, adolescents and adults needs consideration.

Infectious Disease Burden Related to Child Day Care in the Netherlands

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
August 2013 – Volume 32 – Issue 8  pp: A15-A16,e314-e347,805-929
http://journals.lww.com/pidj/pages/currenttoc.aspx

Infectious Disease Burden Related to Child Day Care in the Netherlands
Enserink, Remko; Ypma, Rolf; Donker, Gé A.; Smit, Henriette A.; van Pelt, Wilfrid
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 32(8):e334-e340, August 2013.
doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e318290601e

Abstract:
Background: Studying day-care–associated infectious disease dynamics aids in formulating evidence-based guidelines for disease control, thereby supporting day-care centers in their continuous efforts to provide their child population with a safe and hygienic environment. The objective of this study was to estimate the (excess) infectious disease burden related to child day-care attendance in the Netherlands.

Methods: A Dutch surveillance network of child day-care centers (DCCs) prospectively reported on infectious disease episodes and related use of health care among their child population on a daily basis from March 2010 to March 2012.

Results: Gastroenteritis (387 per 1000 child-years) and influenza-like illness (247 per 1000 child-years) were the most frequently reported infectious diseases. DCCs reported these infectious diseases to occur twice as often among children aged 0–2 years compared with children aged 2–4 years. Antibiotic treatment was required in 6%, a general practitioner visit in 29% and hospitalization in 2% of infectious disease episodes. DCC incidences of gastroenteritis and influenza-like illness requiring children to visit a general practitioner were approximately twice as high as general population estimates for this age group. Part of the DCCs indicated to not always wash the hands of children before eating (34%) or after a toilet visit (15%) or to not always clean the toilet and kitchen areas (17%) on a daily basis.

Conclusion: The infectious disease risk associated with child day-care attendance is substantial, particularly among the very young attendees, in excess of general population estimates for this age group and potentially partly preventable.

Undervaccination of Perinatally HIV-infected and HIV-exposed Uninfected Children in Latin America and the Caribbean

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
August 2013 – Volume 32 – Issue 8  pp: A15-A16,e314-e347,805-929
http://journals.lww.com/pidj/pages/currenttoc.aspx

Undervaccination of Perinatally HIV-infected and HIV-exposed Uninfected Children in Latin America and the Caribbean
Succi, Regina C. M.; Krauss, Margot R.; Harris, D. Robert; Machado, Daisy M.; de Moraes-Pinto, Maria Isabel; Mussi-Pinhata, Marisa M.; Ruz, Noris Pavia; Pierre, Russell B.; Kolevic, Lenka; Joao, Esau; Foradori, Irene; Hazra, Rohan; Siberry, George K.; for the NISDI Pediatric Study Group 2012
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 32(8):845-850, August 2013.
doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e31828bbe68

Abstract:
Background: Perinatally HIV-infected (PHIV) children may be at risk of undervaccination. Vaccination coverage rates among PHIV and HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) children in Latin America and the Caribbean were compared.

Methods: All PHIV and HEU children born from 2002 to 2007 who were enrolled in a multisite observational study conducted in Latin America and the Caribbean were included in this analysis. Children were classified as up to date if they had received the recommended number of doses of each vaccine at the appropriate intervals by 12 and 24 months of age. Fisher’s exact test was used to analyze the data. Covariates potentially associated with a child’s HIV status were considered in multivariable logistic regression modeling.

Results: Of 1156 eligible children, 768 (66.4%) were HEU and 388 (33.6%) were PHIV. HEU children were significantly (P < 0.01) more likely to be up to date by 12 and 24 months of age for all vaccines examined. Statistically significant differences persisted when the analyses were limited to children enrolled before 12 months of age. Controlling for birth weight, sex, primary caregiver education and any use of tobacco, alcohol or illegal drugs during pregnancy did not contribute significantly to the logistic regression models.

Conclusions: PHIV children were significantly less likely than HEU children to be up to date for their childhood vaccinations at 12 and 24 months of age, even when limited to children enrolled before 12 months of age. Strategies to increase vaccination rates in PHIV are needed.

Vaccination of Healthy Children Against Seasonal Influenza: A European Perspective

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
August 2013 – Volume 32 – Issue 8  pp: A15-A16,e314-e347,805-929
http://journals.lww.com/pidj/pages/currenttoc.aspx

Vaccination of Healthy Children Against Seasonal Influenza: A European Perspective
Heikkinen, Terho; Tsolia, Maria; Finn, Adam
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 32(8):881-888, August 2013.
doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e3182918168

Abstract:
Despite ample evidence for the great burden that annual influenza epidemics place on children and society in general, few European countries currently recommend influenza vaccination of healthy children of any age. The most frequently cited reasons for reluctance to extend general vaccine recommendations to children include the view that influenza is a mild illness of limited clinical importance, lack of country-specific data on disease burden, uncertainty about the efficacy and safety of influenza vaccines in children and inadequate evidence of cost-effectiveness of vaccinating children. In recent years, several clinical studies have provided new and important information that help address many of these areas of question and concern. In light of this newly available scientific evidence, influenza vaccine recommendations for children should be properly reevaluated in all European countries. Furthermore, to allow for variation in costs and patterns of healthcare delivery between different countries, cost-effectiveness analyses of influenza vaccination of healthy children should be performed in each country or region. Finally, increased efforts should be made to educate both healthcare professionals and the great public about recent findings and advances in the field of pediatric influenza.

Predicting Seasonal Influenza Vaccination among Healthy Chinese Adults in Hong Kong: A Prospective Longitudinal Study

PLoS One
[Accessed 20 July 2013]
http://www.plosone.org/

Comparison of Different Risk Perception Measures in Predicting Seasonal Influenza Vaccination among Healthy Chinese Adults in Hong Kong: A Prospective Longitudinal Study
Qiuyan Liao, Wing Sze Wong, Richard Fielding
Research Article | published 19 Jul 2013 | PLOS ONE 10.1371/journal.pone.0068019

Abstract
Background
Risk perception is a reported predictor of vaccination uptake, but which measures of risk perception best predict influenza vaccination uptake remain unclear.

Methodology
During the main influenza seasons (between January and March) of 2009 (Wave 1) and 2010 (Wave 2),505 Chinese students and employees from a Hong Kong university completed an online survey. Multivariate logistic regression models were conducted to assess how well different risk perceptions measures in Wave 1 predicted vaccination uptake against seasonal influenza in Wave 2.

Principal Findings
The results of the multivariate logistic regression models showed that feeling at risk (beta=0.25, p=0.021) was the better predictor compared with probability judgment while probability judgment (beta=0.25, p=0.029 ) was better than beliefs about risk in predicting subsequent influenza vaccination uptake. Beliefs about risk and feeling at risk seemed to predict the same aspect of subsequent vaccination uptake because their associations with vaccination uptake became insignificant when paired into the logistic regression model. Similarly, to compare the four scales for assessing probability judgment in predicting vaccination uptake, the 7-point verbal scale remained a significant and stronger predictor for vaccination uptake when paired with other three scales; the 6-point verbal scale was a significant and stronger predictor when paired with the percentage scale or the 2-point verbal scale; and the percentage scale was a significant and stronger predictor only when paired with the 2-point verbal scale.

Conclusions/Significance
Beliefs about risk and feeling at risk are not well differentiated by Hong Kong Chinese people. Feeling at risk, an affective-cognitive dimension of risk perception predicts subsequent vaccination uptake better than do probability judgments. Among the four scales for assessing risk probability judgment, the 7-point verbal scale offered the best predictive power for subsequent vaccination uptake.

Evidence Review to Support Influenza Vaccine Introduction in WHO’s Western Pacific Region

PLoS One
[Accessed 20 July 2013]
http://www.plosone.org/

A Review of the Evidence to Support Influenza Vaccine Introduction in Countries and Areas of WHO’s Western Pacific Region
Gina Samaan, Michelle McPherson, Jeffrey Partridge
Research Article | published 16 Jul 2013 | PLOS ONE 10.1371/journal.pone.0070003

Abstract
Background
Immunization against influenza is considered an essential public health intervention to control both seasonal epidemics and pandemic influenza. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are five key policy and three key programmatic issues that decision-makers should consider before introducing a vaccine. These are (a) public health priority, (b) disease burden, (c) efficacy, quality and safety of the vaccine, (d) other inventions, (e) economic and financial issues, (f) vaccine presentation, (g) supply availability and (h) programmatic strength. We analyzed the body of evidence currently available on these eight issues in the WHO Western Pacific Region.

Methodology/Principal Findings
Studies indexed in PubMed and published in English between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2010 from the 37 countries and areas of the Western Pacific Region were screened for keywords pertaining to the five policy and three programmatic issues. Studies were grouped according to country income level and vaccine target group. There were 133 articles that met the selection criteria, with most (90%) coming from high-income countries. Disease burden (n = 34), vaccine efficacy, quality and safety (n = 27) and public health priority (n = 27) were most frequently addressed by studies conducted in the Region. Many studies assessed influenza vaccine policy and programmatic issues in the general population (42%), in the elderly (24%) and in children (17%). Few studies (2%) addressed the eight issues relating to pregnant women.

Conclusions/Significance
The evidence for vaccine introduction in countries and areas in this Region remains limited, particularly in low- and middle-income countries that do not currently have influenza vaccination programmes. Surveillance activities and specialized studies can be used to assess the eight issues including disease burden among vaccine target groups and the cost-effectiveness of influenza vaccine. Multi-country studies should be considered to maximize resource utilization for cross-cutting issues such as vaccine presentation and other inventions.

Single-dose vaccine against tick-borne encephalitis

PNAS – Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
(Accessed 20 July 2013)
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/recent

Single-dose vaccine against tick-borne encephalitis
Alexander A. Rumyantsev, Maryann Giel-Moloney, John Catalan, Yuxi Liu, Qing-sheng Gao, Jeff Almond, Harry Kleanthous, and Konstantin V. Pugachev
PNAS 2013 ; published ahead of print July 15, 2013, doi:10.1073/pnas.1306245110
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/07/11/1306245110.abstract

Abstract
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus is the most important human pathogen transmitted by ticks in Eurasia. Inactivated vaccines are available but require multiple doses and frequent boosters to induce and maintain immunity. Thus far, the goal of developing a safe, live attenuated vaccine effective after a single dose has remained elusive. Here we used a replication-defective (single-cycle) flavivirus platform, RepliVax, to generate a safe, single-dose TBE vaccine. Several RepliVax-TBE candidates attenuated by a deletion in the capsid gene were constructed using different flavivirus backbones containing the envelope genes of TBE virus. RepliVax-TBE based on a West Nile virus backbone (RV-WN/TBE) grew more efficiently in helper cells than candidates based on Langat E5, TBE, and yellow fever 17D backbones, and was found to be highly immunogenic and efficacious in mice. Live chimeric yellow fever 17D/TBE, Dengue 2/TBE, and Langat E5/TBE candidates were also constructed but were found to be underattenuated. RV-WN/TBE was demonstrated to be highly immunogenic in Rhesus macaques after a single dose, inducing a significantly more durable humoral immune response compared with three doses of a licensed, adjuvanted human inactivated vaccine. Its immunogenicity was not significantly affected by preexisting immunity against WN. Immunized monkeys were protected from a stringent surrogate challenge. These results support the identification of a single-cycle TBE vaccine with a superior product profile to existing inactivated vaccines, which could lead to improved vaccine coverage and control of the disease.

Influenza: Prioritizing Homeless and Hard-to-Reach Populations

Public Health Ethics
Volume 6 Issue 2 July 2013
http://phe.oxfordjournals.org/content/current

Influenza: Prioritizing Homeless and Hard-to-Reach Populations
Kristy Buccieri
http://phe.oxfordjournals.org/content/6/2/185.abstract
Abstract
The manner in which limited vaccines are distributed during a pandemic is an ethical issue. The utility principle has been used to argue priority be given to certain individuals based on factors such as the epidemiology of the spread of disease and maintaining the functioning of society. The equity principle has been used to encourage fair practices that account for the economic and social costs of all decisions made. We argue that both principles are met through priority vaccination of homeless individuals, as this strategy protects a medically vulnerable population while reducing the chances of transmission to others as they move through populated urban spaces. We begin by reviewing debates around ethical vaccine distribution. We then argue the homeless are a medically high-risk population who may contribute to the spread of disease through their mobility. As immunization rates are generally lower among the homeless and many do not access mainstream health care, we argue that community vaccine clinics must be used to reach these individuals. We provide support by analyzing Toronto Public Health’s operation of vaccine clinics in shelters and drop-in centres during pH1N1 and conclude that this strategy is effective for immunizing homeless individuals, bringing together the equity and utility principles.

Enhancing Children against Unhealthy Behaviors—An Ethical and Policy Assessment of Using a Nicotine Vaccine

Public Health Ethics
Volume 6 Issue 2 July 2013
http://phe.oxfordjournals.org/content/current

Enhancing Children against Unhealthy Behaviors—An Ethical and Policy Assessment of Using a Nicotine Vaccine
Ori Lev, Benjamin S. Wilfond, and Colleen M. McBride
Public Health Ethics (2013) 6 (2): 197-206 doi:10.1093/phe/pht006
http://phe.oxfordjournals.org/content/6/2/197.abstract

Abstract
Health behaviors such as tobacco use contribute significantly to poor health. It is widely recognized that efforts to prevent poor health outcomes should begin in early childhood. Biomedical enhancements, such as a nicotine vaccine, are now emerging and have potential to be used for primary prevention of common diseases. In anticipation of such enhancements, it is important that we begin to consider the ethical and policy appropriateness of their use with children. The main ethical concerns raised by enhancing children relate to their impact on children’s well-being and autonomy. These concerns are significant, however they do not appear to apply in the case of the nicotine vaccine; indeed the vaccine could even further these goals for children. Nevertheless, concerns about broadly applying this enhancement may be more challenging. The vaccine may be less cost-effective than alternative public efforts to prevent tobacco use, utilizing it could distract from addressing the foundational causes of smoking and it might not be publically acceptable. Empirical research about these concerns is needed to ascertain their likelihood and impact as well as how they could be minimized. This research could help determine whether behavior-related enhancements hold promise for improving children’s health.

Intradermal delivery for vaccine dose sparing: Overview of current issues

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 34, Pages 3389-3460 (25 July 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X
Skin Vaccination Summit 2011
Gallaudet University, Washington, DC, USA
12–14 October 2011

Intradermal delivery for vaccine dose sparing: Overview of current issues
Original Research Article
Pages 3392-3395
Darin Zehrung, Courtney Jarrahian, Amy Wales
Abstract
There is a wide range of methods and technologies aimed at improving human vaccine products and the way they are delivered. Some of these have the potential to increase vaccine effectiveness in specific populations and may furthermore help to increase vaccine access, reduce costs, and ease the logistical burdens of immunization programs, especially in low-resource settings. One strategy under evaluation is the use of intradermal (ID) delivery of vaccines, which has been shown to result in dose sparing with some vaccines. Novel ID delivery devices could enable needle-free and therefore safer and more reliable ID administration than current ID injection methods, facilitating ID delivery and dose sparing with existing or new vaccines. There are promising clinical data with some vaccines that highlight the potential of reduced-dose immunization via the ID route. And more studies are under way. However, a number of clinical and technical research as well as operational challenges exist, including establishing the optimal doses for different vaccines, reformulating to adjust antigen concentration or add preservatives, matching vaccine vial volume to session size, working with vaccine manufacturers to achieve regulatory clearance for ID delivery, and developing ID delivery devices suitable for the varying scenarios of use of different vaccines. These will need to be addressed before the benefits of ID delivery and the impact of novel ID delivery technologies on human health are fully realized.

Rotavirus vaccine administered by skin vaccination using a microneedle patch

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 34, Pages 3389-3460 (25 July 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X
Skin Vaccination Summit 2011
Gallaudet University, Washington, DC, USA
12–14 October 2011

Dose sparing and enhanced immunogenicity of inactivated rotavirus vaccine administered by skin vaccination using a microneedle patch
Original Research Article
Pages 3396-3402
Sungsil Moon, Yuhuan Wang, Chris Edens, Jon R. Gentsch, Mark R. Prausnitz, Baoming Jiang
Abstract
Skin immunization is effective against a number of infectious diseases, including smallpox and tuberculosis, but is difficult to administer. Here, we assessed the use of an easy-to-administer microneedle (MN) patch for skin vaccination using an inactivated rotavirus vaccine (IRV) in mice. Female inbred BALB/c mice in groups of six were immunized once in the skin using MN coated with 5 μg or 0.5 μg of inactivated rotavirus antigen or by intramuscular (IM) injection with 5 μg or 0.5 μg of the same antigen, bled at 0 and 10 days, and exsanguinated at 28 days. Rotavirus-specific IgG titers increased over time in sera of mice immunized with IRV using MN or IM injection. However, titers of IgG and neutralizing activity were generally higher in MN immunized mice than in IM immunized mice; the titers in mice that received 0.5 μg of antigen with MN were comparable or higher than those that received 5 μg of antigen IM, indicating dose sparing. None of the mice receiving negative-control, antigen-free MN had any IgG titers. In addition, MN immunization was at least as effective as IM administration in inducing a memory response of dendritic cells in the spleen. Our findings demonstrate that MN delivery can reduce the IRV dose needed to mount a robust immune response compared to IM injection and holds promise as a strategy for developing a safer and more effective rotavirus vaccine for use among children throughout the world

Measles vaccination using a microneedle patch

Vaccine
Volume 31, Issue 34, Pages 3389-3460 (25 July 2013)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X
Skin Vaccination Summit 2011
Gallaudet University, Washington, DC, USA
12–14 October 2011

Measles vaccination using a microneedle patch
Original Research Article
Pages 3403-3409
Chris Edens, Marcus L. Collins, Jessica Ayers, Paul A. Rota, Mark R. Prausnitz
Abstract
Measles vaccination programs would benefit from delivery methods that decrease cost, simplify logistics, and increase safety. Conventional subcutaneous injection is limited by the need for skilled healthcare professionals to reconstitute and administer injections, and by the need for safe needle handling and disposal to reduce the risk of disease transmission through needle re-use and needlestick injury. Microneedles are micron-scale, solid needles coated with a dry formulation of vaccine that dissolves in the skin within minutes after patch application. By avoiding the use of hypodermic needles, vaccination using a microneedle patch could be carried out by minimally trained personnel with reduced risk of blood-borne disease transmission. The goal of this study was to evaluate measles vaccination using a microneedle patch to address some of the limitations of subcutaneous injection. Viability of vaccine virus dried onto a microneedle patch was stabilized by incorporation of the sugar, trehalose, and loss of viral titer was less than 1 log10(TCID50) after storage for at least 30 days at room temperature. Microneedle patches were then used to immunize cotton rats with the Edmonston-Zagreb measles vaccine strain. Vaccination using microneedles at doses equaling the standard human dose or one-fifth the human dose generated neutralizing antibody levels equivalent to those of a subcutaneous immunization at the same dose. These results show that measles vaccine can be stabilized on microneedles and that vaccine efficiently reconstitutes in vivo to generate a neutralizing antibody response equivalent to that generated by subcutaneous injection.

From Google Scholar+ [to 20 July 2013]

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary

Receipt of human papillomavirus vaccine among privately insured adult women in a US Midwestern Health Maintenance Organization
EO Kharbanda, E Parker, JD Nordin, B Hedblom… – Preventive Medicine, 2013
Objectives To describe human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine coverage among adult privately insured women including variation in coverage by race/ethnicity. Methods This cross-sectional, observational study included women 18–26 years of age with continuous …

O10. 2 A Community-Randomised Phase IV Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccination Trial of Vaccination Strategy
J Paavonen – Sexually Transmitted Infections, 2013
… Abstract. High-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) is the 2nd leading cause of cancer in women Bivalent Cervarix™ vaccine is highly efficacious against hrHPVs and associated precancers. Mathematical models disagree about the best vaccination strategy. …

Novel HIV vaccine strategies: overview and perspective
Yehuda Z. Cohen, Center for Virus and Vaccine Research, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, USA; Raphael Dolin, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, USA
Published online before print July 15, 2013, doi: 10.1177/2051013613494535 Therapeutic Advances in Vaccines July 15, 2013 2051013613494535
http://tav.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/07/14/2051013613494535.abstract
Abstract
A human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine remains a central component in the quest to control the worldwide epidemic. To examine the status of the development of HIV vaccines, we review the results of the efficacy trials carried out to date and the immunologic principles that guided them. Four vaccine concepts have been evaluated in HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trials, and the results of these trials have provided significant information for future vaccine development. While one of these trials demonstrated that a safe and effective HIV vaccine is possible, many questions remain regarding the basis for the observed protection and the most efficient way to stimulate it. Novel HIV vaccine strategies including induction of highly potent broadly neutralizing antibodies, use of novel homologous and heterologous vector systems, and vectored immunoprophylaxis seek to expand and build upon the knowledge gained from these trials.

Immunogenicity of Quadrivalent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine in Organ Transplant Recipients
D Kumar, ER Unger, G Panicker, P Medvedev… – American Journal of Transplantation…, 2013
Abstract Solid organ transplant recipients are at risk of morbidity from human papillomavirus
(HPV)-related diseases. Quadrivalent HPV vaccine is recommended for post- transplant patients but there are no data on vaccine immunogenicity. We determined the …

Vaccines: The Week in Review 13 July 2013

Vaccines: The Week in Review is a weekly digest — summarizing news, events, announcements, peer-reviewed articles and research in the global vaccine ethics and policy space. Content is aggregated from key governmental, NGO, international organization and industry sources, key peer-reviewed journals, and other media channels. This summary proceeds from the broad base of themes and issues monitored by the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy in its work: it is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. You are viewing the blog version of our weekly digest, typically comprised of between 30 and 40 posts below all dated “29 June 2013″
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Email Summary: Vaccines: The Week in Review is published as a single email summary, scheduled for release each Saturday eveningbefore midnight (EDT in the U.S.). If you would like to receive the email version, please send your request to david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org.
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pdf version: A pdf of the current issues is available here: Vaccines_The Week in Review_13 July 2013
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Twitter: Readers can also follow developments on twitter: @vaxethicspolicy.
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Links: We endeavor to test each link as we incorporate it into any post, but recognize that some links may become “stale” as publications and websites reorganize content over time. We apologize in advance for any links that may not be operative. We believe the contextual information in a given post should allow retrieval, but please contact us as above for assistance if necessary.
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David R. Curry, MS
Executive Director
Center for Vaccine Ethics and Policy
a program of the
– Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Medical School
– The Wistar Institute Vaccine Center
– Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Vaccine Education Center
Associate Faculty, Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Medical School

– email: david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org
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Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) Update: IHR Emergency Committee, CDC Recommendations

WHO: Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) – Statement by WHO Director-General, Dr Margaret Chan
9 July 2013
“Cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) have been reported regularly to WHO since 2012. In order to take an independent expert view of the situation and to be prepared for any further action, should it be required, the Director-General convened a meeting of the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee. The Emergency Committee is composed of international experts from a variety of relevant disciplines and all Regions of WHO, their task is to provide expert technical advice to the Director-General in accordance with the IHR (2005) [see link to list of members below].

“The first meeting of the Committee was held on Tuesday, 9 July 2013, from 12:00 to 15:00 Geneva time (CET).

“After reviewing data on the current situation provided by the Secretariat, and information presented to the Committee by officials of several States Parties which have, or have had, cases of MERS-CoV, and after further deliberation, the Committee considered that additional information was needed in a number of areas.

“The Committee also considered it needed time for further discussion and consideration. In this regard, it noted that a second Committee meeting is set to be held Wednesday, 17 July 2013, at 12:00 Geneva time (CET).
http://www.who.int/ihr/procedures/statements_20130709/en/index.html

List of Members of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee concerning Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)
http://www.who.int/ihr/procedures/emerg_comm_members_2013/en/index.html

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WHO: Global Alert and Response (GAR) – Disease Outbreak News
http://www.who.int/csr/don/2013_03_12/en/index.html
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) – update 11 July 2013  Excerpt
The Ministry of Health (MoH) in Saudi Arabia has announced an additional laboratory-confirmed case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infection in the country.

The patient is a 66 year-old man from Asir region with an underlying health condition. He is currently in critical but stable condition.

In addition, a Qatari patient earlier confirmed with MERS-CoV infection, who was being treated in the United Kingdom died on 28 June 2013.

Globally, from September 2012 to date, WHO has been informed of a total of 81 laboratory-confirmed cases of infection with MERS-CoV, including 45 deaths.

Based on the current situation and available information, WHO encourages all Member States to continue their surveillance for severe acute respiratory infections (SARI) and to carefully review any unusual patterns…

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CDC/MMWR Watch – July 12, 2013 / Vol. 62 / No. 27
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwr_wk.html
Update: Recommendations for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)
Weekly
July 12, 2013 / 62(27);557-557
On June 11, 2013, CDC issued interim infection prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with known or suspected Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infection in U.S. hospitals (1). To date, no MERS-CoV cases have been reported in the United States; however, cases have been reported in eight other countries (2). Recent published reports (3,4) have described limited health-care transmission of MERS-CoV, including cases among health-care personnel in international settings. These published reports highlight the need for rapid detection of infectious patients and adherence to correct infection prevention measures to prevent transmission of the virus among patients, health-care personnel, and visitors.

In coming months, the U.S. health-care system might be called upon to provide care to patients infected with MERS-CoV. Front-line providers and health-care organizations should be prepared to care for MERS-CoV patients as part of routine operations. To aid providers and facilities, CDC has developed checklists that identify key actions that can be taken now to enhance preparedness for treating persons with MERS-CoV infection and compiled a list of preparedness resources (available at http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/preparedness).

Additional information, including guidance on case definitions, infection control, case investigation, and specimen collection and testing, is available at the CDC MERS website (2).         The MERS website contains the most current information and guidance, which is subject to change. State and local health departments with questions should contact the CDC Emergency Operations Center at telephone, 770-488-7100.

References

    1. CDC. Interim infection prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2013. Available at http://wwwdev.cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/infection-prevention-control.html.
    2. CDC. Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2013. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/index.html.
    3. Assiri A, McGeer A, Perl TM, et al. Hospital outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus. N Engl J Med 2013. Epub June 19, 2013.
    4. Mailles A, Blanckaert K, Chaud P, et al. First cases of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infections in France, investigations and implications for the prevention of human-to-human transmission, France, May 2013. Euro Surveill 2013;18(24).

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6227a4.htm?s_cid=mm6227a4_w

Lions Clubs International committed to raise US$30 million for GAVI

 Lions Clubs International committed to raise US$30 million for GAVI through “a unique partnership designed to protect tens of millions of children in the world’s poorest countries against measles, a highly infectious disease that kills an estimated 430 people every day, mostly in developing countries.” Under the partnership, Lions Clubs will deploy its network of 1.35 million volunteers to raise US$30 million for the GAVI Alliance by 2017, when Lions Clubs celebrates its 100th anniversary. The funds raised by the Lions will be matched by the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, bringing the total to US$60 million. Lions Clubs and GAVI “will work with ministries of health in developing countries to ensure children are vaccinated against measles and rubella. Lions will also play a key role in social mobilization efforts by working work with local leaders, coordinating community-level publicity and serving as volunteers at vaccination centers.”

Full media release: HAMBURG, Germany, July 8, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire:  http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lions-clubs-international-and-gavi-alliance-partner-to-protect-children-from-measles-214616501.html

Global Fund announces support HIV, malaria programs in Namibia; seeks Technical Review Panerl nominees

   The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria signed agreements with Namibia for US$91.6 million to further support the national HIV response and US$8.5 million for malaria programs. Dr. Richard Kamwi, Minister of Health, said, “We are very pleased to be signing these grants, which will allow us to continue to improve the quality of health of our people in Namibia. The Global Fund continues to be an important partner in our country, and we are committed to continue investing in this fight. Our government is currently funding 75 percent of ARV treatment and we thank the Global Fund for funding the remaining 25 percent. Thanks to this support we were able to reach 85 percent coverage in March last year.”
Full media release: 9 July 2013  WINDHOEK, Namibia:  http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/mediacenter/newsreleases/2013-07-09_Namibia_and_the_Global_Fund_Sign_USD_100_Million_Grant_Agreement/

Global Fund Seeks Applicants for Technical Review Panel
02 July 2013
Excerpt
The Global Fund said it is seeking new members for a Technical Review Panel, an independent group of experts convened to assess the technical merit of funding requests to the Global Fund. The Panel also plays a role in guiding the strategic focus of Global Fund investments, by looking at effective program design and implementation strategies, so that the greatest impact can be achieved…

Senior level HIV experts, tuberculosis experts, and malaria experts as well as experts on health systems, community systems, and cross cutting development are all encouraged to consider applying. Applicants will be evaluated on their technical qualifications, interpersonal skills and other qualities. We seek qualified experts who bring a range of technical skills and experience from the public and private sectors and civil society. Significant experience working in a developing country is a key requirement.

The closing date for applications is Wednesday, 31 July 2013, at 12 Noon (GMT). For more information on how to apply, please visit: http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/trp/recruitment/
http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/mediacenter/announcements/2013-07-02_Global_Fund_Seeks_Applicants_for_Technical_Review_Panel/

Prevenar 13 receives European approval for an expanded indication to include adults aged 18 to 49 years

    Pfizer announced that Prevenar 13* received European approval for an expanded indication to include adults aged 18 to 49 years for active immunization for the prevention of invasive disease caused by vaccine-type Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae). With previously approved use in infants, young children and adolescents aged 6 weeks to 17 years, as well as adults 50 years of age and older, Prevenar 13 is now the only pneumococcal vaccine in the EU that offers protection against invasive disease from infancy through adulthood. Pfizer noted that the European Commission’s decision to approve this label expansion for Prevenar 13 followed the submission and review of data from an open-label Phase 3 trial of the vaccine in healthy adults aged 18 to 49 years.2 The study – which met all primary and secondary objectives – showed that Prevenar 13 is at least as immunogenic in this age group as it is in adults 60 to 64 years of age, as measured one month after vaccination.

Full media release: July 10, 2013  NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20130710005477/en/Pfizer-Receives-European-Approval-Expand-Prevenar-13*

Global Good to commercialize vaccine storage invention for use in developing countries

   Global Good and AUCMA announced an agreement to commercialize Global Good’s vaccine storage invention for use in developing countries. Under the agreement, AUCMA, described as a leading refrigeration company, “will manufacture and distribute the device to help strengthen the vaccine supply chain in underserved regions. The agreement marks the first commercialization deal for Global Good, which is a collaboration between Intellectual Ventures (IV) and Bill Gates to invent technology that improves life in developing countries.” Global Good’s vaccine storage device uses “a combination of super-insulation techniques to hold vaccines at the appropriate temperature for more than a month with no external power. Originally unveiled by IV CEO Nathan Myhrvold at TED 2010, the device was developed at IV Lab and recently completed field trials in Senegal.” The vaccine storage device will undergo additional field testing in Africa before broader manufacturing and distribution in 2014. “With only a single batch of ice, it can store up to 300 doses of vaccines, enough to serve a community of 6,000 for more than a month. The device is also equipped with technology to monitor its location, internal temperature and the number of times vaccines have been retrieved from it. This information can be communicated via daily SMS transmissions and downloaded via a USB port to inform future vaccination campaign planning.”

Full Media Release: BELLEVUE, Wash. and QINGDAO, China, July 9, 2013 /PRNewswire/ http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/global-good-and-aucma-partner-to-commercialize-vaccine-storage-invention-for-developing-countries-214733141.html

PATH names Dr. David C. Kaslow vice president of product development; Ashley Birkett as deputy director of Malaria Vaccine Initiative.

PATH named Dr. David C. Kaslow to the newly created position of vice president of product development, and Ashley Birkett as deputy director of PATH’s Malaria Vaccine Initiative. In his new role, Dr. Kaslow, currently director of PATH’s Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI), “will oversee the activities of all five of PATH’s product development programs, as well as PATH’s China programs, which also focus heavily on product development activities.”  PATH’s five product development programs consist of MVI, Drug Development, Technology Solutions, Vaccine Development, and Vaccine Access and Delivery. These programs represent PATH’s work in community-based interventions, devices, diagnostics, drugs, and vaccines. Dr. Kaslow “is a physician-scientist with 25 years of vaccine research and development experience whose professional career encompasses the academic, governmental, and private sectors. He served as vice president and head of vaccine project leadership and management at Merck Research Laboratories and worked for more than a decade as a tenured scientist at the National Institutes of Health, where he founded the Malaria Vaccine Development Unit. He became director of MVI in early 2012 and, prior to that, served for three years as chair of MVI’s Vaccine Science Portfolio Advisory Council.”

PATH also announced that Ashley Birkett, PhD, a five-year veteran of MVI and current director of research and development (R&D), has been appointed to the new position of deputy director at MVI, effective immediately. In his previous position as director of R&D at MVI, Ashley has led MVI’s efforts to support the development of transmission-blocking vaccines; guided MVI’s portfolio of evaluation technology projects, which are developing and refining ways to assess vaccine efficacy prior to large-scale field trials; and provided technical support to MVI’s two additional program areas: next-generation vaccines and the RTS,S program. Prior to joining MVI, he was senior director of preclinical research at Acambis (now part of Sanofi Pasteur Biologics Co.).

Full media release: Seattle, July 12, 2013 http://www.path.org/news/pr130712-kaslow.php