Key issues in the clinical development and implementation of TB vaccines in South Africa.
Date
2012
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier.
Abstract
Significant progress has been made in advancing the development pipeline for a new and more effective
TB vaccine with some candidate vaccines now in late stage clinical evaluation. However, progress has
been hampered by an incomplete understanding of the components of a protective immune response
and limited animal models, rendering the field unable to reliably predict vaccine efficacy earlier in
preclinical development, including by evaluation in animal models, and limiting the predictive utility of
comparing immunogenic effects across vaccine candidates in phase I/II studies. Consequently, new
candidate vaccines have to be evaluated for efficacy in large-scale phase II/III trials using clinical
endpoints. Apart from the technical challenges of characterising TB incidence in target populations at
high risk of acquiring TB disease and standardising case definitions in order to improve both the
sensitivity and more importantly the specificity of trial endpoints, there is an urgency in expanding and
supporting the considerable trial infrastructure that will be required to evaluate and ultimately license
a new TB vaccine. In the longer term, implementation strategies are dependent on what policy makers
most value. Economic analyses will be essential to guide policy and implementation. This paper outlines
the gaps and challenges and identifies solutions for effectively developing and efficiently introducing
a new TB vaccine.
Description
Keywords
Tuberculosis--Vaccination--South Africa., Tuberculosis--Epidemiology--South Africa.
Citation
Rustomjee, R. et al. 2012. Key issues in the clinical development and implementation of TB vaccines in South Africa. Tuberculosis 92 (5) pp. 359-364.