Maure, Clara; Khazhidinov, Kanat; Kang, Hyolim; Auzenbergs, Megan; Moyersoen, Pascaline; Abbas, Kaja; Santos, Gustavo Mendes Lima; Medina, Libia Milena Hernandez; Wartel, T Anh; Kim, Jerome H; +2 more... Clemens, John; Sahastrabuddhe, Sushant; (2024) Chikungunya vaccine development, challenges, and pathway toward public health impact. Vaccine, 42 (26). 126483-. ISSN 0264-410X DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.126483
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Abstract
Chikungunya is a neglected tropical disease of growing public health concern with outbreaks in more than 114 countries in Asia, Africa, Americas, Europe, and Oceania since 2004. There are no specific antiviral treatment options for chikungunya virus infection. This article describes the chikungunya vaccine pipeline and assesses the challenges in the path to licensure, access, and uptake of chikungunya vaccines in populations at risk. Ixchiq (VLA1533/Ixchiq - Valneva) was the first licensed chikungunya vaccine by the US Food and Drug Administration in November 2023, European Medicines Agency in May 2024, and Health Canada in June 2024. Five chikungunya vaccine candidates (BBV87 - BBIL/IVI, MV-CHIK - Themis Bioscience, ChAdOx1 Chik - University of Oxford, PXVX0317 / VRC-CHKVLP059-00-VP - Bavarian Nordic, and mRNA-1388 - Moderna) are in development. Evidence on chikungunya disease burden alongside the public health and economic impact of vaccination are critical for decision-making on chikungunya vaccine introduction in endemic and epidemic settings. Further, global and regional stakeholders need to agree on a sustainable financing mechanism for manufacturing at scale to facilitate fair access and equitable vaccine distribution to at-risk populations in different geographic settings. This could partly be facilitated through obtaining consensus on scientific and regulatory principles for initial vaccine introduction and generating evidence on chikungunya burden and disease awareness among populations at risk. Specifically, this article advocates for the formation of a global chikungunya vaccine consortium that includes regulators, policymakers, sponsors, and manufacturers to assist in overcoming the global and local challenges for chikungunya vaccine licensure, policy, financing, demand generation, and access to at-risk populations.
Item Type | Article |
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Faculty and Department | Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology & Dynamics (2023-) |
Research Centre |
Vaccine Centre Centre for the Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases |
PubMed ID | 39467413 |
Elements ID | 232024 |
Official URL | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.126483 |
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Filename: Maure-etal-2024-Chikungunya-vaccine-development-challenges.pdf
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