
A biopharmaceutical company collaborating with Âé¶¹´«Ã½ scientists on an Ebola vaccine announced that tests on the vaccine, still in development, have shown it is able to retain its effectiveness without refrigeration. This is especially important for many rural areas in Africa that are most at-risk for another Ebola outbreak.
“What we’ve just recently shown with the work performed with Soligenix, Inc. at the University of Colorado is that we can dry stabilize the key antigen for the Ebola vaccine so that it basically can be stored at room temperature or elevated temperature—you can almost leave it out in the sun—and it can be stable for up to three months,” said Assistant Professor , at the University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½ at Mānoa .
The announcement was made by , Inc., which is a late-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing products to treat rare diseases where there is an unmet medical need.
Collaboration for stability
The company is collaborating with UH Mānoa and (HBI). to develop a heat stable subunit Ebola vaccine. Soligenix said thermostabilization (heat stabilization) formulation studies, conducted with Theodore Randolph at the , have also shown that the use of thermostable formulations may allow full immunization to potentially be achieved with fewer vaccinations.
“None of the other Ebola vaccines under development have the ability to withstand high temperatures, which is an ongoing concern in areas of the world where Filoviruses are endemic,” said Lehrer. “The ability to stabilize our vaccine candidate to retain immunogenicity may not only have an impact on logistics, but has also the potential to reach more persons at need. A vaccine that needs to be given fewer times increases the likelihood that more people receive sufficient doses of the vaccine to protect them from disease.
“We are very encouraged by these preliminary results and look forward to our continuing collaboration with Soligenix and HBI to further develop our Ebola and multivalent filovirus vaccines.”
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JABSOM video on Ebola vaccine discovery
—By Tina Shelton
