| Literature DB >> 31776599 |
Valentina Bernasconi1, Paul A Kristiansen1, Mike Whelan2, Raúl Gómez Román1, Alison Bettis1, Solomon Abebe Yimer1, Céline Gurry1, Svein R Andersen1, Debra Yeskey3, Henshaw Mandi1, Arun Kumar1, Johan Holst1, Carolyn Clark1, Jakob P Cramer2, John-Arne Røttingen1,4, Richard Hatchett1, Melanie Saville2, Gunnstein Norheim5.
Abstract
Today's world is characterized by increasing population density, human mobility, urbanization, and climate and ecological change. This global dynamic has various effects, including the increased appearance of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs), which pose a growing threat to global health security.Outbreaks of EIDs, like the 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa or the current Ebola outbreak in Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), have not only put populations in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) at risk in terms of morbidity and mortality, but they also have had a significant impact on economic growth in affected regions and beyond.The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovation (CEPI) is an innovative global partnership between public, private, philanthropic, and civil society organizations that was launched as the result of a consensus that a coordinated, international, and intergovernmental plan was needed to develop and deploy new vaccines to prevent future epidemics.CEPI is focusing on supporting candidate vaccines against the World Health Organization (WHO) Blueprint priority pathogens MERS-CoV, Nipah virus, Lassa fever virus, and Rift Valley fever virus, as well as Chikungunya virus, which is on the WHO watch list. The current vaccine portfolio contains a wide variety of technologies, ranging across recombinant viral vectors, nucleic acids, and recombinant proteins. To support and accelerate vaccine development, CEPI will also support science projects related to the development of biological standards and assays, animal models, epidemiological studies, and diagnostics, as well as build capacities for future clinical trials in risk-prone contexts.Entities:
Keywords: CEPI; Chikungunya; MERS-CoV; Nipah; Rift Valley fever
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Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31776599 PMCID: PMC6925075 DOI: 10.1007/s00103-019-03061-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz ISSN: 1436-9990 Impact factor: 1.513
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations investors (as of November 2019). Conversion rates as per November 2019
| Investor | Investment amount (local currency) | Investment amount (US$ million) | Type of investment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Norway | Norwegian krone 1.6 billion | 191.8 | Multiyear |
| Japan | US$125 million | 125 | Multiyear |
| Germany | €90 million | 102.4 | Multiyear |
| Wellcome Trust | US$100.4 million | 100.4 | Multiyear |
| Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | US$100 million | 100 | Multiyear |
| European Commission | €80 million | 89.6 | Multiyear |
| United Kingdom | £10 million | 12.6 | Single year |
| Canada | Canadian $14 million | 10.7 | Multiyear |
| Australia | Australian $6.5 million | 4.9 | Multiyear |
| Belgium | €0.5 million | 0.6 | Single year |
Fig. 1The role of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) within the vaccine development pipeline; CEPI is funding projects from phase I trials to the development of a stockpile and has a role as facilitator in the vaccine development process from discovery to the delivery and stockpiling of new vaccines. (NIH National Institutes of Health; IMI Innovative Medicines Initiative; GloPID‑R Global Research Collaboration for Infectious Disease Preparedness; EC European Commission; BMGF Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; BARDA Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority; DTRA Defense Threat Reduction Agency; WHO World Health Organization; PDs product developers; CMOs contract manufacturing organizations; GHIF Global Health Investment Fund; GAVI Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization; UNICEF United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund; PAHO Pan American Health Organization; MSF Médecins Sans Frontières)
The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) funded projects (as of November 2019)
| Partner | Disease | CEPI funding | Technology platform | Development phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Janssen Vaccines and University of Oxford | Lassa | US$19.0 million | Recombinant virus | Preclinical |
| MERS-CoV | Phase I | |||
| Nipah | Preclinical | |||
| Profectus BioSciences, Emergent BioSolutions, and PATH | Lassa | US$36.0 million | Recombinant virus | Preclinical |
| Nipah | US$25.0 million | Protein subunit | Preclinical | |
| International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) | Lassa | US$54.9 million | Recombinant virus | Preclinical |
| IDT Biologika | MERS-CoV | US$36.0 million | Recombinant virus | Phase I |
| Themis Bioscience | Lassa | US$58.5 million | Recombinant virus | Phase I |
| MERS-CoV | Preclinical | |||
| Chikungunya | Phase III | |||
| University of Tokyo | Nipah | US$31.0 million | Recombinant virus | Phase I |
| Inovio Pharmaceuticals | Lassa | US$56.0 million | DNA | Preclinical |
| MERS-CoV | Phase II | |||
| Colorado State University | Rift Valley fever | US$9.5million | Attenuated virus | Preclinical |
| Wageningen Bioveterinary Research | Rift Valley fever | US$12.5 million | Attenuated virus | Phase I |
| Valneva | Chikungunya | US$23.4 million | Attenuated virus | Phase I |
| Public health vaccines | Nipah | US$43.6 million | Recombinant virus | Preclinical |
| Imperial College London | Marburg | US$8.4 million | RNA | Preclinical |
| Influenza | ||||
| Rabies | ||||
| CureVac | Lassa | US$34.0 million | RNA | Preclinical Phase I |
| Rabies | ||||
| Yellow fever | ||||
| University of Queensland | MERS-CoV | US$10.6 million | Recombinant protein | Preclinical |
| Influenza | ||||
| Respiratory syncytial virus |