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Pandemic influenza vaccine development: Status of preparedness

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Pandemic Influenza Vaccines: Building a Platform for ... Jacqueline Katz, ID, CDC. Tim Uyeki, ID, CDC. Robin Robinson, HHS. Zhiping Ye, FDA. John Wood, NIBSC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pandemic influenza vaccine development: Status of preparedness


1
Pandemic influenza vaccine development Status of
preparedness
  • Ruben Donis
  • Influenza Division, NCIRD, CCID, CDC

Pandemic Influenza Vaccines Building a Platform
for Global Collaboration Beijing, China January
28-30, 2007
2
Organizers and Sponsors
  • Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention
  • The National Bureau of Asian Research
  • Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Wellcome Trust
  • Other partner organizations

3
Pandemic Vaccines challenges and opportunities
  • Challenges
  • Insufficient capacity to immunize the world
    population
  • Opportunities
  • Strengthen virus detection
  • Increase vaccine production capacity by 6-fold
  • Deliver vaccines to everyone in a timely fashion
  • Develop improved vaccines

4
Immunization Strategies
  • Non-replicating vaccines
  • Inactivated influenza virions
  • Subviral (split) or whole virion
  • Produced in eggs or (soon) cell culture
  • Recombinant expression systems
  • Baculovirus, insect cells, VLP (HA-NA-NP-M)
  • Nucleic acid vaccines and Adenovirus vectors
  • Replicating vaccines
  • Live attenuated cold-adapted strains
  • Produced in eggs or (soon) cell culture
  • Viral vectored alphavirus, flavivirus,
    paramyxovirus

Licensed in USA for use as Seasonal Vaccines
5
Immunization Challenges
  • Protective immunity induced by currently licensed
    vaccines is largely strain specific
  • Strain differences reduce vax efficacy
  • Vaccine stockpiles become obsolete
  • Prepare many homologous pandemic vaccines
  • Challenge
  • Broaden specificity of protective immunity
  • Live and inactivated vaccines

6
Immunization Challenges
  • Inactivated avian HA subtype vaccines appear to
    be poorly immunogenic in humans
  • Requiring 2 doses of 90 µg (6-fold gt seasonal
    flu)
  • Adjuvants reduce the required dose increase
  • Challenge
  • Increase the immunogenicity of inactivated
    vaccines
  • Develop adjuvants
  • Alternative immunogens or routes of delivery

7
Pandemic Vaccine Development Challenges
Pandemic Influenza (H5N1)
Pandemic Vaccine (H5N1)
Immunity to Influenza (H5N1)
Person-to-person Transmission
8
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

9
Surveillance Challenges
  • Virologic surveillance is critical
  • Strengthen PH systems and laboratory support
  • Collaboration with animal health authorities
    critical
  • Rapid bedside pandemic flu diagnostics needed
  • Lab confirmation of all human cases
  • Molecular methods realtime PCR
  • Virus culture in BSL3
  • Facilities expand local BSL3 lab capacity
  • Opportunities
  • Library of viruses for diagnostic and vaccine
    development
  • Expanded molecular databases
  • International sharing of strains and sequences is
    essential
  • WHO IHR recommendations in effect June 1 07

10
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

11
Vaccine Strain Selection
  • Antigenic analysis of viral isolates
  • Resource intensive process
  • BSL3 enhanced facilities, personnel, ferrets
  • Panels of antisera to numerous virus strains
  • Genetic characterization
  • Sequence analysis increasing rapidly
  • Public access to virus sequences is improving
  • Genbank, LANL, BGI
  • Challenge
  • Sharing reagents and sequences is critical
  • WHO International Health Regulations (IHR) buy-in

12
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

13
Engineer Safe Vaccine Viruses Reverse Genetics
BSL3-enhanced virus
High Yield Attenuated virus (PR8)
Virulent Hemagglutinin
9 days
High Yield avirulent vaccine
Vero Cells
BSL2 virus
14
High Yield Reassortants by Reverse Genetics
  • Work must be done in BSL3
  • HA modification required for BSL2 mfg
  • 62 reassortants (PR8H5N1)
  • RG Technically robust
  • Applicable to inactivated and LAIV
  • Challenges
  • Requires vaccine-certified Vero cells
  • Commercial use RG process is protected by patents

15
CDC RG reassortant stocks
  • 3 H5N1 candidate vaccines distributed by CDC
  • No fees charged to users
  • A/Vietnam/1203/2004 Clade 1
  • 54 recipients
  • A/Indonesia/5/2005 Clade 2.1
  • 49 recipients
  • A/Anhui/1/2005 Clade 2.3
  • Collaboration with China National Influenza
    Center
  • 14 recipients in 1st quarter 2007
  • MTA for RG required by Medimmune

16
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Safety testing permit to transfer from BSL3 into
    BSL2
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

17
Transfer virus from BSL3 to BSL2
  • USA HPAI is restricted to BSL3 by Dep't of
    Agriculture
  • USDA Select Agent
  • Apply for permit to use RG vaccine reassortants
    in BSL2
  • Source of materials (viruses, plasmids,
    description of modification)
  • Sequence analysis of the HA gene
  • amino acid motif at the HA cleavage site
  • Pathogenicity testing in chickens
  • Plaque characterization on chicken embryo
    fibroblast (CEF) cells with or without trypsin
  • With permit approval, all subsequent work done at
    BSL-2 level

18
RG Ressortant WHO safety evaluation
  • RG Reassortant Reference Stock
  • WHO Guidelines Lack of pathogenicity
  • Ferrets
  • Intranasal challenge 6 logs
  • Level of virus replication and symptoms PR8
  • No replication in brain tissue
  • Mouse pathotyping optional
  • Chickens
  • Intravenous pathogenicity test

19
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

20
Egg-based production
  • Supply of fertile eggs for vaccine
  • No surge capacity
  • Production must be scheduled many months in
    advance
  • FY04 HHS-CDC Contract Sanofi-Pasteur
  • Guaranteed production of fertile eggs for
    vaccines
  • Short term fix to secure a minimum of pandemic
    vax production

21
Pandemic Vaccine Manufacturers
  • Australia
  • CSL
  • Austria
  • Baxter
  • Canada
  • ID-GSK
  • China
  • Sinovac
  • France
  • Sanofi-Pasteur
  • Germany
  • GSK
  • Italy
  • Chiron-Novartis
  • Japan
  • Denka-Seiken, Kaketsuken, Kitasato
  • Netherlands
  • Solvay, Nobilon
  • Switzerland
  • Berna
  • UK
  • Chiron-Novartis
  • USA
  • Medimmune, Merck, Sanofi, Novartis

Egg production, source (partial listing)
22
Production Challenge
  • Current annual total monovalent vaccine
    production capacity worldwide
  • 900-1,000 Million doses _at_ 15 µg/dose
  • Sufficient for 15 of population (only one dose)
  • gt5 years required to immunize everyone
  • Inactivated and live vaccines produced in eggs
  • Fertile egg supplies not likely to increase
  • Challenge
  • New technologies are needed

23
Cell-based production
  • Vertebrate cells used as substrate to propagate
    virus in large scale
  • US HHS awarded 1,000 million in FY06
  • Goal Production capacity to deliver 600 million
    doses (_at_ 15 µg) in 6 months
  • Awardees

24
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

25
Potency Evaluation
  • Determine HA content in bulk vaccine
  • Required for formulation and dispensing
  • Single Radial Immunodiffusion (SRID)
  • Homologous monovalent sheep serum
  • Several weeks to develop and validate
  • Requires purified HA to immunize sheep
  • Calibrated homologous antigen
  • Challenge
  • Calibrated antisera and antigen made available
    quickly
  • Prevent duplication of effort

26
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

27
Regulatory Compliance Challenges
  • Food and Drug Administration, CBER
  • Licenses vaccines in USA
  • Code of Federal Regulations
  • International Conference on Harmonization (ICH)
    Guidelines
  • Cell substrates
  • Vero cells
  • FDA to view egg-based inactivated pandemic
    vaccine as strain change for seasonal flu
  • No discrimination due to reverse genetics

28
Overview of Inactivated Pandemic Vaccine
Production
  • Surveillance access to viruses from patients at
    diverse locations
  • Knowledge of strains that infect humans
  • Antigenic analysis
  • Identify the prevailing antigenic types, select
    representative strain
  • Produce avirulent high-yield reassortant virus by
    reverse genetics
  • Manufacture vaccine in eggs
  • Potency testing
  • Regulatory approval
  • Distribute vaccine public health private
    networks

29
Distribution Challenges
  • Timeliness
  • Pandemic modeling studies
  • Speed of vaccine deployment may be as important
    as antigenic match
  • USA target capacity of 10 million doses/week
  • Germann et al. PNAS 1035935 2006

30
  • Pandemic Vaccines Development Timeline

2
1
z
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
x
y
Week
RG reassortant
Safety
Working seed
Large scale production in eggs
Formulate and fill
Produce Standardize Potency Reagents
31
Sustainability Challenges
  • Pandemic preparedness in year 2020
  • Political system fatigue
  • New initiatives are more appealing
  • How to sustain pandemic preparedness?
  • Strengthen seasonal influenza control
  • Strengthen links with animal health control
  • Think beyond H5N1
  • H9N2, H7N, H2N2, etc remain a threat
  • Global Platforms for Collaboration

32
Acknowledgements
  • WHO GIP Surveillance Network
  • Catherine Gerdil, Sanofi Pasteur, France
  • Ervin Fodor, Cambridge, UK
  • Erich Hoffmann, (MedImmune) St. Jude, Memphis,
    USA
  • Yumi Matsuoka, ID, CDC
  • Kanta Subbarao, NIH
  • Alexander Klimov, ID, CDC
  • Jacqueline Katz, ID, CDC
  • Tim Uyeki, ID, CDC
  • Robin Robinson, HHS
  • Zhiping Ye, FDA
  • John Wood, NIBSC
  • David Swayne USDA, ARS, Southeast Poultry
    Research Laboratory, Athens, GA, USA Nancy Cox,
    IB, CDC
  • Many more.

33
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