European Vaccine Initiative: lessons from developing malaria vaccines.

Mark J. Geels, Egeruan B. Imoukhuede, Nathalie Imbault, Harry Van Schooten, Terry McWade, Marita Troye-Blomberg, Roland Dobbelaer, Alister Craig, Odile Leroy

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

For over 10 years, the European Vaccine Initiative (EVI; European Malaria Vaccine Initiative until 2009) has contributed to the development of 24 malaria candidate vaccine antigens with 13 vaccine candidates being advanced into Phase I clinical trials, two of which have been transitioned for further clinical development in sub-Saharan Africa. Since its inception the EVI organization has operated as a funding agency, but with a clear service-oriented strategy. The scientific successes and difficulties encountered during these years and how these efforts have led to standardization and harmonization in vaccine development through large-scale European consortia are discussed. In the future, the EVI will remain instrumental in the pharmaceutical and clinical development of vaccines against ?diseases of poverty? with a continued focus on malaria. EVI will continue to focus on funding and managing preclinical evaluation up to Phase I/II clinical trials and strengthening the vaccine-development infrastructure in Europe, albeit with a global orientation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1697-1708
Number of pages12
JournalExpert Review of Vaccines
Volume10
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2011

Keywords

  • diseases of poverty
  • EMVI
  • EVI
  • malaria
  • PDP
  • research infrastructure
  • vaccine

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