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Isis Innovation Licenses Tuberculosis Vaccine
Emergent Biosolutions and the University of Oxford form joint venture to develop an advanced tuberculosis vaccine with funding from Wellcome Trust and Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation.Wellcome Trust and Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation have agreed to provide £8 million in funding for Phase IIb clinical trial that is expected to commence in 2009
- The vaccine candidate, MVA85A, has been granted orphan drug designation by the European Medicines Agency (EMEA)
- If successful, MVA85A would be the first new vaccine licensed to prevent tuberculosis in over 80 years
OXFORD, UK and ROCKVILLE, MD July 23, 2008-The University of Oxford and Emergent BioSolutions Inc. (NYSE:EBS) announced today that they have formed a joint venture, The Oxford-Emergent Tuberculosis Consortium Ltd. (the "Consortium"), to further develop MVA85A, the world's most clinically advanced vaccine candidate for the prevention of tuberculosis. The University of Oxford, through its technology transfer office, Isis Innovation Limited, has exclusively licensed the MVA85A tuberculosis vaccine candidate and related technology to the Consortium.
The Consortium will work with the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation to evaluate the efficacy of MVA85A in infants in a Phase IIb clinical trial anticipated to begin in 2009. The trial will take place at a clinical trial site developed by Aeras and the University of Cape Town's South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI) in Worcester, South Africa. The Consortium has secured £8 million (approximately $16 million) from The Wellcome Trust and the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation to fund this Phase IIb trial. Under agreements with the Consortium, Emergent BioSolutions has the rights to commercialize the MVA85A vaccine. The Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation will have distribution rights in the developing world to ensure availability and access to the vaccine to those who need it.
The MVA85A vaccine candidate is designed to work in tandem with the Bacille Calmette Guerin vaccine (BCG), which is currently the only available vaccine against tuberculosis. BCG is administered to infants throughout the developing world and in certain countries in the developed world. However, BCG provides only variable protection against pulmonary tuberculosis and is not effective in adults.
The MVA85A vaccine candidate is intended to augment the response of T-cells already primed by the BCG vaccine. Clinical trials to date have demonstrated consistently high cellular immune responses in those who received the MVA85A vaccine candidate following vaccination with BCG. The MVA85A vaccine has been awarded orphan drug status by EMEA and is the most clinically advanced of a new generation of tuberculosis vaccine candidates.
The MVA85A vaccine was originally developed at the University of Oxford by Dr. Helen McShane, a Wellcome Trust Senior Clinical Research Fellow, working with Dr. Sarah Gilbert and Professor Adrian Hill, a Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow. Further funding has been provided by the European Community's fifth and sixth Framework Programmes and the Medical Research Council (MRC), a UK organization dedicated to promoting the balanced development of medical and related biological research in the UK.
"I am excited by the prospect of further development of this promising vaccine candidate," said Dr. McShane of the University's Jenner Institute. "Curbing tuberculosis is a pressing global health priority, and if achieved could save the lives of millions. We at Oxford have selected Emergent BioSolutions as our commercial partner given their vaccine development experience and dedication to bringing lifesaving vaccines to market."
Mauro Gibellini, senior vice president corporate development, Emergent BioSolutions, said, "This unique public-private partnership provides Emergent BioSolutions with an extraordinary opportunity to address a major public health crisis. We believe that by pooling our resources and expertise with such distinguished academic and charitable peers, this consortium is well-positioned to develop what would be a groundbreaking vaccine to prevent one of the world's most widespread diseases and tragic causes of death."
Dr. Ted Bianco, Director of Technology Transfer at the Wellcome Trust, said, 'We have been losing the battle against tuberculosis for too long, as a result of poor diagnostics, protracted treatment regimes, antibiotic resistance and HIV-induced, immuno-suppression. Conquering this historic enemy has to be one of our highest public health priorities, and developing an effective vaccine is arguably the key to a defensive strategy that will ultimately turn the tide in this insidious war. It is first class science that has brought us this new hope, and it will be first-class partnering that takes us to the next stage. I applaud Dr. McShane and her colleagues for their tireless efforts."
'New tuberculosis vaccines are urgently needed. A vaccine that is effective in all ages against all forms of the disease could have an enormous global public health impact by arresting the continued expansion of this terrible epidemic,' said Jerald C. Sadoff, MD, the President and CEO of the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation. 'Leading scientists at the University of Oxford have been working on a novel vaccine candidate for infants and adolescents. I am encouraged by the support given to Oxford's efforts by The Wellcome Trust and Emergent BioSolutions," Dr. Sadoff said. "Aeras is pursuing this vaccine and other promising candidates. We will support MVA85A in expanded Phase II efficacy trials and in the use of Aeras-sponsored Phase III field sites if MVA85A meets all of the established criteria for such trials."
About Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis, which is caused by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacterium, is the world's second leading cause of death from infectious disease in adults, after HIV/AIDS, according to the World Health Organization. Over one third of the world's population is infected with the disease, and an estimated 1.7 million people die of tuberculosis every year. One of ten people infected will develop the active form of the disease during their lifetime. Drug-resistant strains including multi-drug resistant TB and extensively drug-resistant TB are on the rise, raising concerns about the efficacy of the current BCG vaccine and leaving many patients without effective treatment. This year, the World Health Organization reported the highest rates of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis ever recorded.
The increased susceptibility to tuberculosis seen in people infected with HIV is having a devastating impact, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. The number of new cases of tuberculosis has more than doubled in countries with high HIV prevalence in the past 15 years. Tuberculosis is the most common cause of death in people living with HIV in Africa and a major cause of death elsewhere.
Tuberculosis is a global problem, infecting millions worldwide. In the United States, where there is currently no licensed vaccine, tuberculosis rates in the United States are declining. However, efforts to strengthen and intensify tuberculosis prevention, treatment and control are still urgently needed to address this global pandemic.
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