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A U.S. Government-Coordinated Effort to Leverage Non-Human Primate Data to Facilitate Ebolavirus Vaccine Development

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10081201

Keywords

vaccine development; filovirus; ebolavirus; non-human primate; public-private partnership; regulatory; Animal Rule; FANG

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A United States Government interagency group called FANG has been established to support the development of biodefense medical countermeasures. By using non-human primate models and standardized assays, animal use and duplication of effort can be minimized, resulting in reduced time and cost for vaccine development. This successful strategy can be applied to other high-risk pathogens and highlights the importance of strategic biodefense preparedness.
A United States Government (USG) interagency group, the Filovirus Animal Non-Clinical Group (FANG), has been established to support the development of biodefense medical countermeasures (MCMs). As both vaccines and therapeutics are licensed using non-traditional pathways, such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Animal Rule (AR), non-human primate (NHP) models and associated assays have been developed and standardized across BSL4 testing sites to evaluate candidate products. Vaccine candidates are evaluated using these NHP models, and through this public-private partnership, a meta-analysis of NHP control data has been conducted and submitted to the FDA as a master file. This is an example of how existing NHP control data can be leveraged in lieu of conducting separate natural history studies at multiple testing facilities to demonstrate the consistency of a standardized animal model for vaccine development. As a result, animal use can be minimized and the duplication of effort avoided, thus reducing the amount of time needed to conduct additional studies, as well as the cost of vaccine candidate development. This successful strategy may be applied to other pathogens of high consequence for vaccine development, and shows how strategic preparedness for biodefense can be leveraged in response to outbreaks and public health emergencies.

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