| Literature DB >> 22051890 |
Rino Rappuoli1, Christian W Mandl, Steven Black, Ennio De Gregorio.
Abstract
Vaccines have been one of the major revolutions in the history of mankind and, during the twentieth century, they eliminated most of the childhood diseases that used to cause millions of deaths. In the twenty-first century, vaccines will also play a major part in safeguarding people's health. Supported by the innovations derived from new technologies, vaccines will address the new needs of a twenty-first century society characterized by increased life expectancy, emerging infections and poverty in low-income countries.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22051890 PMCID: PMC7098427 DOI: 10.1038/nri3085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Immunol ISSN: 1474-1733 Impact factor: 53.106
Figure 1Increase in life expectancy.
The graph shows the increase in life expectancy that occurred in the countries with longest lifespans[1,2,3] from 1750 to the present day and also the projected increase in longevity for this century. The average life expectancy for individuals in the society for which most vaccines were developed was 60–65 years. This society was characterized by a high proportion of children and young people, and is quite different from today's society, which is characterized by a high proportion of elderly people and a life expectancy of more than 80 years.
Figure 2Target population for vaccines in the twenty-first century.
a | The most important vaccines for each age group are reported. b | Special target groups for vaccination in the twenty-first century. The most important vaccines for each target group are reported. The lists of vaccines reported are indicative and they are not intended to be exhaustive. C. difficile, Clostridium difficile; E. coli, Escherichia coli; EV71, enterovirus 71; H. influenzae, Haemophilus influenzae; K. pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae; P. aeruginosa, Pseudomonas aeruginosa; S. aureus, Staphylococcus aureus; SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome.
Vaccine adjuvants
| Adjuvant name (year licensed) | Adjuvant class | Components | Vaccines (disease) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Alum* (1924) | Mineral salts | Aluminium phosphate or aluminium hydroxide | Various |
| MF59 (Novartis; 1997) | Oil-in-water emulsion | Squalene, polysorbate 80 (Tween 80; ICI Americas), sorbitan trioleate (Span 85; Croda International) | Fluad (seasonal influenza), Focetria (pandemic influenza), Aflunov (pre-pandemic influenza) |
| AS03 (GlaxoSmithKline; 2009) | Oil-in-water emulsion | Squalene, Tween 80, α-tocopherol | Pandremix (pandemic influenza), Prepandrix (pre-pandemic influenza) |
| Virosomes (Berna Biotech; 2000) | Liposomes | Lipids, hemagglutinin | Inflexal (seasonal influenza), Epaxal (hepatitis A) |
| AS04* (GlaxoSmithKline; 2005) | Alum-absorbed TLR4 agonist | Aluminium hydroxide, MPL | Fendrix (hepatitis B), Cervarix (human papilloma virus) |
|
| |||
| CpG 7909, CpG 1018 | TLR9 agonist | CpG oligonucleotides alone or combined with alum/emulsions | – |
| Imidazoquinolines | TLR7 and TLR8 agonists | Small molecules | – |
| PolyI:C | TLR3 agonist | Double-stranded RNA analogues | – |
| Pam3Cys | TLR2 agonist | Lipopeptide | – |
| Flagellin | TLR5 agonist | Bacterial protein linked to antigen | – |
| Iscomatrix | Combination | Saponin, cholesterol, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine | – |
| AS01 | Combination | Liposome, MPL, saponin (QS21) | – |
| AS02 | Combination | Oil-in-water emulsion, MPL, saponin (QS21) | – |
| AF03 | Oil-in-water emulsion | Squalene, Montane 80, Eumulgin B1 PH | – |
| CAF01 | Combination | Liposome, DDA, TDB | – |
| IC31 | Combination | Oligonucleotide, cationic peptides | – |
| AF03, adjuvant formulation 03; CAF01, cationic adjuvant formulation 01; DDA, dimethyldioctadecylammonium; MPL, monophosphoryl lipid A; Pam3Cys, tripalmitoyl-S-glyceryl cysteine; PolyI:C, polyinosinic–polycytidylic acid; TDB, trehalose dibehenate; TLR, Toll-like receptor. | |||
| *Adjuvants licensed in the United States. | |||
Examples of newly emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases*
| Disease | Affected demographic | Current vaccine or vaccines |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Anthrax | Individuals affected by bioterrorism | Anthrax vaccine is licensed and in use in the US for military and laboratory personnel who are at risk |
| Cryptosporidiosis | Europe, North America | None |
| Cyclosporiasis | North America | None |
| Ebola virus disease | Africa | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in animal models |
| Enterovirus 71 | Asia | None |
| Asia, Europe, North America | None | |
| H1N1 2009 pandemic influenza A | Global | Adjuvanted and unadjuvanted inactivated vaccines, live-attenuated vaccine |
| H5N1 influenza A | Asia | Adjuvanted and unadjuvanted inactivated vaccines |
| Hantavirus pneumonia | North and South America | None |
| Lassa fever | Africa | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in animal models |
| Marburg haemorrhagic fever | Africa | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in animal models |
| SARS | Global | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in animal models |
|
| ||
| Cholera | Asia, South America | Multiple vaccines in use globally |
| Dengue | Asia, North and South America | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in clinical trials in humans |
| Human monkeypox | Africa | None |
| Malaria, multidrug resistant | Africa, Asia | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in clinical trials in humans, with RTS,S being the furthest along in clinical trials |
| Plague | Africa | Vaccines approved for human use, with others in development |
| Asia, Europe, North and South America | No vaccine approved for humans; vaccines under evaluation in clinical trials in humans, with one glycoconjugate vaccine having failed to show efficacy in a Phase III trial | |
| Tuberculosis, multidrug resistant | Global | BCG in routine use, with other vaccines in development |
| Yellow fever | Africa, Asia, South America | Live-attenuated vaccines in use globally, with others in development |
| BCG, bacille Calmette–Guérin; SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome. | ||
| *Information in this table is taken from Refs | ||
Figure 3Technologies for vaccine development.
Since the times of Pasteur, vaccines have been developed using empirical approaches consisting mostly of killed or live-attenuated microorganisms, partially purified components of pathogens (subunit vaccines), detoxified toxins or polysaccharides. These vaccines have been very successful in eliminating many devastating diseases. During the past 30 years, subsequent waves of new technologies have made possible vaccines that were impossible with the empirical approaches. These include recombinant DNA technology, glycoconjugation, reverse vaccinology and many emerging next-generation technologies, such as novel adjuvants, synthetic biology and structure-based vaccine design (structural vaccinology), that promise a very successful future for vaccines. BCG, bacille Calmette–Guérin; C. difficile, Clostridium difficile; E. coli, Escherichia coli; H. influenzae, Haemophilus influenzae; MMRV, measles, mumps, rubella, varicella; S. aureus, Staphylococcus aureus.
New and improved technologies and resulting vaccines
| Years | Cell culture | Recombinant DNA, virus-like particles | Reverse vaccinology | Conjugation | Combinations | New adjuvants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1980s | Rabies | Hepatitis B | – | – | – | |
| 1990s | Japanese encephalitis virus, varicella zoster, hepatitis A, rotavirus | Acellular pertussis, Lyme disease | – | Meningococcus (C) | Diphtheria–tetanus–pertussis– | Influenza |
| 2000s | Avian Influenza, live influenza, rotavirus, varicella zoster, H1N1 influenza, smallpox | HPV | – | Pneumococcus (7-, 10-, 13-valent), meningococcus (A, C, W135, Y) | Hepatitis B–hepatitis A, diphtheria–tetanus–acellular pertussis–poliovirus–hepatitis B, meningococcus (A, C, W135, Y), MMRV | HPV, H1N1 influenza |
| 2011 and beyond | Yellow fever virus | – | Meningococcus B, | Group B streptococcus, typhoid | Meningococcus (A, B, C, W135, Y) | Vaccines with superior alum formulation, TLR agonists |