| Literature DB >> 28861908 |
Dylan Sheerin1,2, Peter Jm Openshaw3, Andrew J Pollard1,2.
Abstract
Vaccination is a principal and highly cost-effective means of controlling infectious diseases, providing direct protection against pathogens by conferring long-lasting immunological memory and inducing population-level herd immunity. Despite rapid ongoing progress in vaccinology, there remain many obstacles to the development and deployment of novel or improved vaccines; these include the underlying science of how to induce and sustain appropriate protective immune responses as well as bureaucratic, logistic and socio-political hurdles. The failure to distribute and administer existing vaccines to at-risk communities continues to account for a large proportion of infant mortality worldwide: almost 20 million children do not have access to basic vaccines and several million still die each year as a result. While emerging epidemic or pandemic diseases pose a significant threat to global health and prosperity, there are many infectious diseases which provide a continuous or cyclical burden on healthcare systems which also need to be addressed. Gaps in knowledge of the human immune system stand in the way of developing technologies to overcome individual and pathogenic variation. The challenges in tackling infectious disease and directions that the field of preventive medicine may take to improve the current picture of global health are the focus of this review.Entities:
Keywords: Difficult pathogens; Emerging infectious diseases; Future vaccines; Immunisation programmes; Vaccine-preventable disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28861908 PMCID: PMC7163762 DOI: 10.1002/eji.201746942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532
UK immunisation schedule: past and present. A. UK immunisation schedule in 1996 B. Current UK immunisation schedule. DTwP, diphtheria, tetanus, whole cell pertussis; MMR, measles, mumps, rubella; TIV, trivalent influenza vaccine; DTaP, diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis; IPV, inactivated polio vaccine; Hib, Haemophilus influenzae type b; HepB, hepatitis B; PCV, pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; Rota, rotavirus; MenB, meningococcal group B; MenC, meningococcal group C; HPV, human papillomavirus; MenACWY, meningococcal group A, C, W, Y; PPV, pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine
| A. UK immunisation schedule 1996 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 months | 3 months | 4 months | 13 months | 3 years | Teenagers | Elderly | |
| DTwP‐Hib + oral polio | DTwP‐Hib + oral polio | DTwP‐Hib + oral polio | MMR | DT+ oral polio | DT + oral polio | TIV | |
| MMR | |||||||
Figure 1Decline in infant mortality rate per 1000 live births between 1995 and 2015. (A) Decline in infant mortality in the UK. (B) Comparison of the decline in infant mortality between low‐, middle‐, and high‐income countries worldwide. These data represent the number of infants dying before reaching one year of age, per 1000 live births in a given year and were estimated by the UN Inter‐agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UNICEF, WHO, World Bank, UN DESA Population Division).
Figure 2Summary of the steps required to take a vaccine to licensure. Once a vaccine fulfils the criteria required of it at the preclinical stage of development it must then pass through three phases of clinical trials before it acquires regulatory approval. A Phase IV clinical trial can be conducted after licensure to assess the impact that the vaccine has had on a population.