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Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Supply Issues April 20, 2005

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Title: Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Supply Issues April 20, 2005


1
Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Supply IssuesApril
20, 2005
  • Raymond A. Strikas, M.D.
  • National Immunization Program, Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention

2
Presentation Outline
  • Pandemic Vaccine Supply and Timelines (some
    reminders from yesterdays and todays
    discussions)
  • Current status of vaccine supply
  • Potential expansion of vaccine supply
  • Capacity increase
  • Antigen-sparing approaches

3
Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Production Timelines
  • Development of reference strain
  • Use of reverse genetics allows HA and NA from
    pandemic strain to be combined with other genes
    from a strain well adapted to growth in eggs
  • Vaccine production (monovalent)
  • Master seed developed from reference strain
  • Growth in eggs and purification
  • Formulation and filling
  • Regulatory process
  • Optimal timing 3-4 months (if reference strain
    and potency testing reagents already developed)

4
(No Transcript)
5
Pandemic Spread and Seasonality
  • Spread of a pandemic/shifted virus
  • Months before U.S. community outbreaks for prior
    pandemic strains
  • 1918 0 1957 4-5 1968 2-3 1977 3-4
  • Spread of the next pandemic
  • More rapid because of increased international
    travel
  • More warning because of better surveillance
  • Seasonality
  • Fall Spring seasonality generally preserved
  • Multiple pandemic waves occur potentially in
    the same season

6
Timeline of First and Second Pandemic Waves,
1957-58
Ref Trotter, Am J Hyg, 1959
7
Asian Influenza, 1957-58
  • No national or state plans in place
  • 6 US based manufacturers
  • States formed advisory committees on influenza
    control in August-September
  • Voluntary vaccine allocation recommended by PHS
    and ASTHO no large public purchase of vaccine.
    60 million doses produced, but only 35 million
    available by October 26 (outbreak 1st wave
    ending)
  • PHS considered priority for HCWs, essential
    personnel, and high-risk (those with heart
    disease, TB, and other chronic ailments
    including pregnancy)
  • Recommendations were not made from PHS, but left
    to state health departments some added children
    lt1 year, and all persons gt50 years.

8
Avenues for Exploration in the Inter-pandemic
Period
Work should be done with attenuated live
vaccines Mineral oil adjuvant vaccines offer
another promising line of attack. More work can
be done in the inter-pandemic years on
potency, dosage, route of introduction, number of
doses, interval between doses, rapid diagnostic
techniques. Some suggest working toward two
separate vaccines in the future, one for children
and one for adults. The challenge is unlimited.
U.S. Public Health Service, Influenza 1957,
1958, unpublished
9
Hong Kong Influenza, 1968
  • Ad hoc response (again)
  • No national or state plans
  • ACIP recommendations same as for that years
    polyvalent vaccine
  • Chronically ill persons
  • Older age groups (beginning at gt45 years)
  • 21 million persons vaccinated (40 million doses
    produced)

10
Swine Influenza Program, 1976
11
Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Supply Estimates
Current Status
  • Pandemic vaccine supply assumptions
  • Only US produced vaccine will be available (1
    mfr)
  • 15 ug antigen/dose and 2 doses/person will be
    needed for protection
  • Monovalent vaccine production capacity will be
    3-fold that of annual vaccine (e.g., similar Ag
    yield/egg)
  • Current Sanofi production is sufficient to
    deliver 250 M monovalent doses/year (5
    million/week)
  • Implication about 1 of the population can be
    protected per week

12
Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Supply Possible
Additional Options
  • If 7.5ug/dose is immunogenic, vaccine supply is
    doubled
  • If whole virus vaccine were used, production may
    be increased 50
  • One to two additional manufacturers may have U.S.
    licensed vaccine soon, may offer additional
    pandemic supply

13
New Technologies and Antigen-sparing Concepts
14
Potential Antigen-SparingApproaches to Influenza
Vaccination
  • Vaccine delivery strategies
  • Partial doses (1/2 dose or other)
  • Alternate route of injection (e.g., intradermal)
  • Immune enhancement strategies
  • Adjuvanted vaccine (e.g., alum, MF59)
  • Alternative delivery technologies
  • Immunostimulant patch, dose-sparing needles,
    syringes, jet injectors

15
Influenza Vaccine Partial Doses
  • Treanor et al, Vaccine 2002, documented small
    differences in healthy adults 18-49 yrs, between
    7.5ug and 15ug doses
  • lt20 in achieving hemagglutinin inhibition titer
    of 140
  • lt1.5 in ratios for GMTs between doses for all 3
    antigens
  • Authors concluded that vaccinating N healthy
    adults with half dose will protect more persons
    than vaccinating ½ N with full dose
  • DoD conducting study with 2004 vaccine data to
    be available spring, 2005

16
Alternate route of injection for Influenza Vaccine
  • Options include intradermal, subcutaneous,
    intranasal, oral
  • Antigens delivered to nasal, other mucosal
    surfaces, dermis may increase immunogenicity
    (more immune receptors)
  • Belshe et al, Kenney et al, NEJM, 2004
    intradermal studies suggest ID delivery may allow
    dose sparing, but small studies. Not as
    immunogenic in adults gt59 years
  • Need larger studies, proper controls

17
Immune enhancement strategiesAdjuvanted vaccine
  • No licensed U.S. influenza vaccine contains an
    adjuvant
  • MF59, ISCOMS (immunostimulating reconstituted
    influenza virosomes) licensed in Europe
  • Adding an adjuvant may provide greater
    immunogenicity with less antigen
  • Alum, MF59 may be most likely choices do
    increase local reactions
  • Studies with U.S. licensed vaccines necessary

18
Alternative Delivery Technologies
  • Immunostimulant patches (e.g., with E. coli heat
    stable enterotoxin)
  • Jet injectors for intradermal vaccination
  • Dose-sparing needle/syringe combinations (may add
    ½ to 1 dose to a 10 dose vial)

19
Potential Timeline of Interventions to Expand
Pandemic Vaccine Supply
Partial dose
Alternate route of administration
Expanded U.S. egg-based production
Adjuvanted vaccine
U.S. cell-culture production
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Number of years until licensure or possible
recommendation
20
Inter-Pandemic and Pandemic Vaccine Target Groups
  • Inter-pandemic vaccine recommendations
  • Persons at high risk of severe influenza
    complications
  • Persons who can transmit disease to those at high
    risk (HCWs and family members of high risk)
  • Pandemic considerations
  • Pandemic impacts may extend beyond health of
    infected persons
  • Need to maintain quality health care system
  • Need to maintain essential community services
  • Vaccine supply will be more limited relative to
    need

21
Potential Vaccine Target Groups and Population
22
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