| Literature DB >> 23533733 |
P F Harrison1, A Hemmerling, J Romano, K J Whaley, B Young Holt.
Abstract
WOMEN WORLDWIDE CONFRONT TWO FREQUENTLY CONCURRENT REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CHALLENGES: the need for contraception and for protection from sexually transmitted infections, importantly HIV/AIDS. While conception and infection share the same anatomical site and mode of transmission, there are no reproductive health technologies to date that simultaneously address that reality. Relevant available technologies are either contraceptive or anti-infective, are limited in number, and require different modes of administration and management. These "single-indication" technologies do not therefore fully respond to what is a substantial reproductive health need intimately linked to pivotal events in many women's lives. This paper reviews an integrated attempt to develop multipurpose prevention technologies-"MPTs"-products explicitly designed to simultaneously address the need for both contraception and protection from sexually transmitted infections. It describes an innovative and iterative MPT product development strategy with the following components: identifying different needs for such technologies and global variations in reproductive health priorities, defining "Target Product Profiles" as the framework for a research and development "roadmap," collating an integrated MPT pipeline and characterizing significant pipeline gaps, exploring anticipated regulatory requirements, prioritizing candidates for problem-solving and resource investments, and implementing an ancillary advocacy agenda to support this breadth of effort.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23533733 PMCID: PMC3600264 DOI: 10.1155/2013/790154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
Figure 1MPT Strategic Milestones 2009–2012.
Study design components.
| Teams and associated activities* | Tasks and deliverables | Data collection approach | Participants | Process contributions (summary conclusions/material outputs) |
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| CAMI Advisory Committee and Core Management Group | Overall design and management of strategic process | Regular telephonic and internet consultation, document preparation, and review | (i) Core strategy management group ( | Series of meeting reports, circulation of survey findings, web posting of presentations, conference convening |
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| Think Tank* | Answer 2 questions: | Document review and consultation (May 2011) | 28 representatives from businesses, foundations, universities, nonprofit organizations, US government agencies (USAID, NIH, FDA) | Conclusions: |
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| Drug-Drug and Drug-Device Working Group | Implement strategy to: | “Snowball” series of surveys, ePolls, qualitative interviews, consultations, invited presentations, consultations, and reviews of successive iterations of TPP parameters and criteria (March 2011–January 2012) | Key populations: reproductive health and HIV research experts and advocates from Asia, Africa, Europe, United States, including | Consensus derived from each survey analyzed to construct consensus TPP for presentation, discussion, feedback from participants in International MPT Symposium (November 2011, Washington, DC) and >60 participants at Global Forum on Multipurpose Prevention Technologies (London, UK, January 2012)* for discussion |
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| Multipurpose Vaccine Working Group | (i) Elicit ideas for multipurpose reproductive health vaccines | (i) “Request for MPT Concepts” formulated, reviewed, emitted |
| 13 submissions received based on active immunization, passive immunization, adenovirus-vectored antibodies, and MPT vaccine development strategies |
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| Scientific Agenda Working Group (SAWG) | (i) Use TPPs developed by the product-specific working groups as framework for | (i) Agenda-driven conference calls to review successive iterations of TPPs and survey responses | (i) Respondents to MPT Product Profiles Survey | (i) SAWG recommendations and priorities endorsed |
| (iv) Analyzing overall pipeline status and gaps | Efforts, and countries with greatest need for MPT products (Product Prioritization Stakeholder Meeting, October 2012) | |||
Reports for the starred activities are available at http://www.cami-health.org [10–13].
Understanding Regional Needs and Priorities for MPT Development*.
| Region | Epidemiology | Priorities, opportunities, challenges for |
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| Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) |
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| India |
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| China |
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| Developed Countries |
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| (v) Approximately 20% of US HIV-positive individuals unaware of their status [ | ||
*Table based on literature review and presentations, discussion, and analysis at January 2012 Global Forum on MPTs hosted by the Wellcome Trust [56] and Microbicides 2012 Conference.
TPP parameters for prioritizing MPT development.
| Parameter | Preferred criteria | Minimally acceptable criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Indications | HIV + contraception | HIV + HSV (high emphasis for non-LDC markets) |
| Route of administration | Vaginal rings | Oral pills, injectables |
| Dosage form and schedule | Sustained release (1–12 months) | Daily |
| Efficacy: | ||
| (i) HIV | 80% | 40%–70% |
| (ii) Contraception | >Current levels per contraceptive of >90% | Current levels with recommended use |
| (iii) STI | >80% | 40% |
| Storage conditions | >40°C/75% RH | 15–30°C/65% RH for topical/pills |
| Shelf life | >36 months | 24 months |
| Yearly product cost/user | <US$ 50 | <US$ 100 |
| Disposal/waste | Concealable, biodegradable user disposal | Controlled disposal (to include all associated materials (implant, injectables)) |
| Adherence | >80% of users follow prescribed regimen | >60% of users follow prescribed regimen |
| Time to licensure | 5 years | 8–12 years (by 2020) |
| Reversibility | 0–24 hours for oral, topical, sustained-release methods | 14–30 days for oral, topical, sustained-release methods |
Multipurpose RH Vaccine Working Group: active immunization concepts.
| Indication and mechanism | Immunogen, adjuvant, and delivery mode |
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| HIV-1, HPV | DNA systemic (IM); subunit mucosal (intranasal, sublingual, and vaginal), CM cellulose (mucoadhesive) |
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| HIV-1, HSV-2, and HPV | Synthesized and chemically modified peptide; Advax adjuvant; injected liquid |
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| HSV, HPV, and HIV | Intravaginal tampon delivery of a nanoemulsion vaccine containing recombinant HSV-2 glycoprotein D and recombinant HPV 16 and 18 L1 protein and HIV glycoprotein 120 |
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| HSV, HIV | Subunit trimeric gp140 and HSV gD; versatile adjuvant system (PLA-NPs), systemic liquid formulation, and mucoadhesive gel carrying both antigens and immunostimulatory molecules to the same dendritic cell (prevents systemic inflammatory responses) |
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| HPV, HBV | Virus-like particle (VLP) subunits, MPL or aloe-derivative adjuvant, nasal prime/boost (systemic prime/nasal boost) |
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| HSV, HIV, and HPV | DNA or subunit prime with HPV VLPs, gD, gp120 (intramuscular); lactococcus cocktail expressing gD, HPV E6/E7, HIV gag for mucosal boost (tablet) |
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| HPV, sperm (immunocontraceptive can be provided separately); antibodies in fallopian tubes and in cervicovaginal mucus plus systemic antibodies and cell-mediated immunity | Salmonella vectored subunits: (a) L1 capsomeres (possibly with L2 peptide), (b) cocktail of sperm antigens; oral tablet |
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| HIV, HSV | Codelivery of immunogens (trimeric gp140 boosts following DNA prime), and microbicides (1% tenofovir or dapivirine) via an intravaginal ring. Mucosal adjuvant is R848 (a TLR 7/8 agonist) to sustain mucosal memory |
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| Dual-purpose HPV (multiple types) vaccine plus griffithsin microbicide (HIV, HSV) | L2 epitope fusion with griffithsin (immunogen/adjuvant); intravaginal ring (or PVA film) for burst release of HPV vaccine (L2-griffithsin fusion protein) and sustained release of griffithsin as a microbicide |
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| HSV, HIV | gD/Fc fusion protein, gp41 anti-idiotype; nasal prime delivered with dry inhaler; cervicovaginal boost delivered as film; FcRn-mediated transport across epithelium |
Reproductive Health Consensus Target Product Profile for MPT Vaccines.
| Parameter | Optimally preferred |
|---|---|
| Indication and mechanism | HSV, HIV, HPV |
| Target population | Women/girls: developed and developing regions |
| Immunogen, adjuvant, and delivery modes | Well-characterized immunogens (but range of adjuvants and delivery modes |
| User-action | Pharmacy or self-administered boosts |
| Boost schedule | Mucosal boost schedule uncertain |
| Typical use efficacy | HSV (70–90%); HIV (70–90%); HPV (>95%) |
| Side effect profile | Minimal |
| Additional benefits | Versatile production platform |
| Shelf life | Years |
| Storage needs | No cold chain required |
| Price | $1/dose |
| Infrastructure | Pharmacy |