Title: Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation
1Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation
- All Party Parliamentary Group
- on Global TB
- London, UK
- 16 May 2007
2Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation
- Mission
- To develop new, more effective TB vaccines and
ensure their availability to all who need them - Goal
- A new TB vaccine in 7 10 years
- ModelInternational, non-profit Product
Development Partnership
3Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
4Tuberculosis Transmission
5Worldwide Distribution of TB
Rates per 100 000, all forms of TB
0 - 24
25 - 49
50 - 99
100 - 299
300 or more
No estimate
6Tuberculosis Pandemic
- In 2005, 1.6 million deaths and 8.8 million new
cases of TB - 2 billion people infected with latent TB
- One third of people living with HIV/AIDS are
co-infected with TB, with the highest burden in
Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. - TB is the leading cause of death of HIV positive
people. In fact, TB accelerates progression of
HIV into AIDS
7 Emergence of Antibiotic Resistance
- XDR-TB is resistant to the most common first line
drugs and at least two classes of second line
drugs - XDR TB in KwaZulu-Natal S. Africa identified in
2006 - 51 of 52 died of XDR-TB within a mean of 20 days
from diagnosis - All patients were HIV positive
- TB difficult to diagnose in HIV positives because
of their poor inflammatory response
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9Invention of BCG Vaccine
By Calmette Guérin 1906-1921 No new TB
Vaccine in 86 years
10BCG Ineffective Against TB Pandemic
- Reduces risk of severe pediatric TB disease
- Unreliable protection against adult pulmonary TB,
which accounts for most TB worldwide - Despite wide use, BCG has had no apparent impact
on growing global TB epidemic - Not known to protect against latent TB
11Potential of a New TB Vaccine
- Achieve global TB control in 15-20 years
- If new vaccine 50-70 better then BCG
- In conjunction with better drugs and diagnostics
- Minimize TB as a global threat by 2050
- lt1 case/million
- TB will not be eliminated without a new vaccine
12Tremendous Need
- Majority of TB vaccine need in developing world
- Typically, new vaccines licensed for the
industrialized world first developing countries
10 to 20 years later
13Yet Barriers for Industry
- Scientific uncertainty
- Uncertain return on investment
- Lack of vaccine development capacity
- Opportunity costs low margin TB vaccine vs. high
margin lifestyle drug?
14New Financing Mechanisms
- PDPs (push)
- Provides resources for translational research
(lab to clinical trial) - Performs preclinical technical assessments and
clinical development of new products - increases NPVs for low margin markets
- Advance Market Commitments (pull)
- Donors commit to buying vaccine when it is
developed - Guarantees ROI for successful product
- 1st AMC for pneumococcal disease (1.5 bn)
15Aeras Role in TB Vaccine Development
- Goals developing vaccines, ensuring access
- At least one new TB vaccine regimen for infants
and one for adolescents within 7-10 years - Full availability and access to all who need TB
vaccines - Focusing global TB vaccine efforts
- Product Development Partnership (PDP)
- Partners with industry, academia, philanthropy,
and government to develop vaccines and conduct
clinical trials - Develops vaccines in its own lab and
manufacturing plant
16Relationship with Partners
- Partner receives
- Support for preclinical development
- Epidemiology and field site preparation
- Support for clinical trials
- Aeras receives
- Partner involvement in disease with developing
country markets - Product development and production support
- Guarantee of affordable access to developing world
17Aeras Global Vaccine Development Partners
Industry GSK, Belgium Crucell, Netherlands SSI,
Denmark ImmunoBiology, UK Serum Institute,
India Thymed, Germany Mycos, U.S. Alphalyse,
Denmark Japan BCG Lab. Korean Institute of
TB Cyncron, Denmark Wuhan Biologicals, China
Academia Cape Town Univ., S. Africa St. Johns
Natl Academy, India Wuhan Univ., China Univ of
Bergen, Norway Karolinska Institute, Sweden Max
Planck, Germany Leiden Univ., Netherlands McGill
Univ., Canada Leiden Univ, Netherlands Oxford,
UK UCLA, U.S. U.C. Davis, U.S. Stanford Univ.,
U.S. St. Louis Univ., U.S. Vanderbilt Univ.,
U.S. Colorado St. Univ., U.S. Harvard Univ.,
U.S. Case Western Reserve University, US
Academia
Foundations/Governments/NGOs Bill Melinda
Gates Foundation U.S. CDC, NIH, NIAID, CBER,
FDA DANIDA, Denmark DGIS, The Netherlands NRC,
Norway KNCV, Netherlands LHL, Norway TB Alert,
UK EDCTP, Europe TB-VAC, Europe STOP TB, WHO
18Aeras - Partnerships in South Africa and India
St. Johns Medical College, Bangalore
Palamaner Taluk
19Clinical Trials Field Site Development
- Clinical trials conducted in high TB burden
countries/regions - Current field sites in South Africa and India
- With EDCTP, developing sites in Kenya and Uganda
- Seeking additional field sites in Asia (China,
Viet Nam or Indonesia) - Building local health care/research capacity
- Professional Development Program builds human
capacity and contributes to development of local
research profession
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21Approach to Induction of Immunity in Infants and
Adolescents Prime Boost Strategy
24 Weeks
14 Weeks
22Prime Boost Strategy
- Demonstrated to be the best method for induction
of cellular immunity in humans - Prime with recombinant BCG or BCG at birth and
boost at 14 weeks and possibly 6 months of age
with new recombinant protein or viral vectored
vaccine - Adolescents who have been given BCG at birth will
be boosted with either recombinant protein or
viral vectored vaccine
23Aeras TB Vaccine Development Pipeline
24Immune Responses and Protection
- All candidate vaccines induce enhanced protection
compared to BCG in animal models - All candidate vaccines induce cellular immune
responses in humans or non-human- primates
25 Manufacturing rBCG
- Production of gt200 million doses/yr of bulk
vaccine for shipment to India other partners
for drying - Provides amount and prices required for
developing world
Aeras manufacturing plant- Fermentation Tanks
Rockville MD
26The introduction of new, effective TB vaccines
will be an essential component of any strategy to
eliminate TB by 2050...New TB vaccines to prevent
childhood and adult forms of TB, to reduce TB in
people coinfected with HIV, and to shorten drug
treatment regimens will fundamentally alter our
approach to TB control.
27UKs Commitment to Global Health
- Key donor to Global Fund to Fight Aids, TB and
Malaria and Stop TB Partnership - Global leader in recognition and support of PDPs
for neglected diseases - DFID serving as chair of PDP Funders Group
- Supporting AMC for pneumococcal vaccines
- Committed to reaching UN goal of .7 of national
income dedicated to foreign aid by 2013
28TB Vaccine Development Funding Needs 2006-15
Total 3.641 billion
Global Plan to Stop TB, 2006-15
29TB Vaccine Funding Needs
- 1.5 billion funding gap (2.1 billion expected
to be available) - Funding need greatest for discovery,
translational research, clinical trials and
manufacturing scale-up
30Aeras TB Vaccine Development Needs
- Advancing development of multiple lead and
back-up vaccine candidates - Building capacity and supporting research in
developing countries - Vaccine manufacturing and scale-up
- Ensuring access for developing countries
31Summary
- A new TB vaccine
- will help achieve global development goals
- is critical to controlling TB pandemic
- is achievable in 7-10 years
- Aeras and its partners leading effort to develop
new TB vaccines - 1.5 billion over the next 10 years is needed to
achieve this goal