Feature Channels: Vaccines

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Released: 3-Apr-2019 8:05 AM EDT
HPV Infection High in Minority Men Who Have Sex with Men Despite Available Vaccine, Rutgers Study Finds
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The rate of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is high among young minority gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men despite the availability of a vaccine that can prevent the infection, a Rutgers School of Public Health study found.

Released: 2-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Resistance fighter
University of Georgia

Fighting antibiotic resistance is a never-ending struggle. By the time a new antibiotic is tested and proven effective, the bacteria it’s meant to fight are often already developing resistance to it.

Released: 27-Mar-2019 12:30 PM EDT
The University of Texas McCombs School of Business and Moody College of Communication Join Forces with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas to Conduct a Study to Improve Adult Vaccine Delivery in Austin/Travis County, Texas
University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin)

The McCombs School of Business and Moody College of Communication at The University of Texas at Austin announce a collaboration with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas (BCBSTX) to launch a research project, “Improving Adult Vaccine Delivery by Optimizing Clinical and Health IT Processes in Austin/Travis County, Texas (VACOPT).”

Released: 25-Mar-2019 5:00 AM EDT
Researchers awarded up to $24 million to develop vaccines and therapies for highly pathogenic Nipah and Hendra viruses
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USU)

The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USU), along with Profectus Biosciences, Inc., the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Mapp Biopharmaceutical, Inc., and the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), have been awarded up to $24.5 million to advance treatments for the highly lethal henipaviruses, Nipah and Hendra.

18-Mar-2019 8:30 AM EDT
Analyzing a Facebook-Fueled Anti-Vaccination Attack: ‘It’s Not All About Autism’
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

Social media has given those espousing anti-vaccination sentiments an effective medium to spread their message. An analysis of a viral Facebook campaign against a pediatric practice reveals that anti-vaccination arguments center around four distinct themes that can appeal to diverse audiences.

Released: 14-Mar-2019 8:30 AM EDT
When is Best Time to Get Flu Shot? Pitt Analysis Compares Scenarios
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

When flu season peaks after mid-winter, tens of thousands of influenza cases and hundreds of deaths can likely be avoided if older adults wait until October to get their flu immunization, a University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine analysis reveals.

Released: 8-Mar-2019 11:05 AM EST
Researchers Unveil Progress and Challenges in Introducing Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia
University of Maryland School of Medicine

Each year there are nearly 11 million cases of typhoid, a disease that is spread through contaminated food, drink and water. Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine are leading an international consortium that is studying the impact of a typhoid conjugate vaccine (TCV) in an effort to accelerate introduction of the vaccine in countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia where there is a high burden of typhoid.

Released: 5-Mar-2019 1:05 PM EST
Revealing the Gut’s B-Cell Training Program May Point to New Means of Developing Oral Vaccines
Weizmann Institute of Science

Currently, very few vaccines can be administered orally. Using a novel imaging method that captures all of the immune cells’ niches within an organ, Weizmann Institute scientists investigated the training process for the cells involved in immunity, developing insights that could lead to the design of more effective oral vaccines.

   
Released: 5-Mar-2019 10:05 AM EST
Hearings Highlight Vaccine Access, Knowledge, Policy Gaps
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

With evidence that the number of measles cases and outbreaks this year is already well on track to exceed last year’s numbers, today’s Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing is drawing urgent attention to a central tenet of public health: vaccines save lives.

Released: 4-Mar-2019 9:00 AM EST
Robots Without Borders: Finding new ways to treat Ebola
Oregon State University, College of Engineering

Aid workers put their lives on the line to treat patients with Ebola. Can robots help make their jobs a little easier and allow more people to survive the disease? Bill Smart, professor of robotics at Oregon State University, is exploring how robots may be most useful during disease outbreaks.

   
Released: 4-Mar-2019 3:05 AM EST
A silver lining like no other
University of South Australia

Vaccinations are the world’s frontline defence against infectious diseases yet despite decades of interventions, unsafe injection practices continue to expose billions of people to serious infection and disease. Now, new technology from the University of South Australia is revolutionising safe vaccination practices through antibacterial, silver-loaded dissolvable microneedle patches, which not only sterilise the injection site to inhibit the growth of bacteria, but also physically dissolve after administration.

18-Feb-2019 2:00 PM EST
Tracking Cholera in a Drop of Blood
University of Utah Health

A multi-institutional, international team of researchers has developed a method that identifies individuals recently infected with Vibrio cholerae O1. The results of the study are available online in the February 20 issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Released: 19-Feb-2019 3:05 PM EST
MSU Technologies Lead to Better Survival, Bigger Catfish for Mississippi Producers
Mississippi State University

Mississippi State-developed vaccination technologies are being commercialized to help the catfish industry save millions for the state that leads the nation in production.

14-Feb-2019 4:05 PM EST
Researchers find trigger that turns strep infections into flesh-eating disease
Houston Methodist

Houston Methodist scientists discovered a previously unknown trigger that turns run-of-the-mill strep infections into the flesh-eating disease childbed fever, which strikes postpartum moms and newborns, often leaving victims without limbs. Using an unprecedented approach, they looked at the interplay between the genome, transcriptome and virulence. This generated a massive data set, lending itself to artificial intelligence analysis. Through AI they unexpectedly discovered a new mechanism controlling virulence. The study appears Feb. 18 in Nature Genetics.

Released: 14-Feb-2019 3:05 PM EST
Immune Profiling: A New Opportunity for Drug Development
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Collectively, assessing a snapshot of a person’s unique state of immune health is called immune profiling, which can entail identifying immune-cell-associated genes and proteins, as well as the cell types themselves.

Released: 14-Feb-2019 2:05 PM EST
When Research Participation Pays, Some People Lie, Penn Study Suggests
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Offering compensation can be an important tactic to attract potential participants for enrollment in research studies, but it might come at a cost. A new study conducted by researchers in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania found that up to 23 percent of respondents lied about their eligibility to participate in a survey when offered payment, even small amounts.

13-Feb-2019 11:00 AM EST
Supercomputing Effort Reveals Antibody Secrets
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Using sophisticated gene sequencing and computing techniques, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and the San Diego Supercomputer Center have achieved a first-of-its-kind glimpse into how the body’s immune system gears up to fight off infection.

1-Feb-2019 10:00 AM EST
Micromotors deliver oral vaccines
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Vaccines have saved millions of lives, but nobody likes getting a shot. That’s why scientists are trying to develop oral vaccines for infectious diseases. But to be effective, the vaccine must survive digestion and reach immune cells within the intestinal wall. Now, researchers reporting in the ACS journal Nano Letters have developed oral vaccines powered by micromotors that target the mucus layer of the intestine.

   
31-Jan-2019 4:05 PM EST
Diversity in the CD4 Receptor Protects Chimpanzees from Infection by AIDS-like Viruses
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

An international team of collaborators found that the CD4 surface protein, which is used by HIV and SIV as the receptor to enter immune cells, is highly variable among wild chimpanzees.

Released: 4-Feb-2019 12:05 AM EST
Step forward for pneumonia vaccine development
University of Adelaide

A vaccine against the biggest bacterial killer on the planet is a step closer to being available with funding secured for preclinical trials.

Released: 31-Jan-2019 11:05 AM EST
Study paves way for promising HIV vaccine
University of Manitoba

The study is the first in the world to demonstrate that chickenpox vaccine, when given to people who are already immune to it, does not trigger an unwanted “HIV-welcoming” immune state in the genital mucosa (lining) or in the bloodstream.

Released: 29-Jan-2019 10:05 AM EST
John Theurer Cancer Center Leading Enrollment for Global Phase 2 WIZARD Study Evaluating DSP-7888 in Patients with Recurrent Glioblastoma
Hackensack Meridian Health

John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack Meridian Health Hackensack University Medical Center announced today that it is leading enrollment worldwide for WIZARD 201G, a global Phase 2 study in glioblastoma (GBM). The trial, sponsored by Boston Biomedical, is evaluating DSP-7888, an investigational cancer vaccine, in combination with bevacizumab for recurrent disease.

Released: 29-Jan-2019 9:40 AM EST
Nasal Whooping Cough Vaccine Trial Underway at Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt vaccine researchers are enrolling adult volunteers in a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-sponsored Phase II clinical trial that will study a next generation pertussis vaccine that may protect people from whooping cough.

Released: 28-Jan-2019 9:05 AM EST
NIAID-Sponsored Clinical Trial of Ebola Vaccines Begins at Cincinnati Children's
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

A Phase 1 clinical trial of investigational vaccines intended to protect against Zaire ebolavirus (Ebola) has begun in the United States at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The study is sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

Released: 25-Jan-2019 9:40 AM EST
VUMC Scientists ‘Sprint’ to Find Anti-Zika Antibodies
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Scientists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and colleagues in Boston, Seattle and St. Louis are racing to develop — in a mere 90 days — a protective antibody-based treatment that can stop the spread of the Zika virus.

17-Jan-2019 4:35 PM EST
Zika vaccines should induce responses by CD4+ T cells
PLOS

Immune cells called CD4+ T cells could be important mediators of protection against the Zika virus, according to a study published January 24 in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Sujan Shresta of the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, and colleagues. The findings support vaccine strategies that induce a protective CD4+ T cell response to the Zika virus.

22-Jan-2019 4:30 PM EST
Induction of Potent Anticancer Immunity Through Rapid Tumor Antigen Identification and Conversion to Personalized Synthetic DNA Vaccines
Wistar Institute

Wistar scientists and collaborators demonstrated the utility of an optimized synthetic DNA vaccine platform for rapidly inducing immunity against unique combinations of tumor neoantigens.

   
Released: 22-Jan-2019 5:05 PM EST
Los Alamos scientist Bette Korber to discuss her work developing an HIV vaccine
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Los Alamos National Laboratory Fellow Bette Korber will discuss her work designing a vaccine against HIV (the virus that causes AIDS) in three Frontiers in Science public lectures beginning Jan. 31 in Los Alamos.

   
22-Jan-2019 2:05 PM EST
Anti-flu antibodies can inhibit two different viral proteins, NIH study reveals
The Rockefeller University Press

Researchers from the National Institutes of Health have discovered that antibodies that may form the basis of a universal flu vaccine inhibit a second viral protein in addition to the one that they bind. The study, to be published January 25 in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, reveals that antibodies that recognize the viral surface protein hemagglutinin can also inhibit the viral neuraminidase, and that this enhances antibody neutralization of the virus and the activation of innate immune cells with anti-viral activity.

Released: 15-Jan-2019 12:05 PM EST
New Drug Shows Promise Against Deadly Ricin Toxin
Tulane University

A new study at the Tulane National Primate Research Center showed for the first time that an experimental drug can save nonhuman primates exposed to deadly ricin toxin, a potential bioterrorism agent.

Released: 14-Jan-2019 10:05 AM EST
Two Texas Tech Researchers Working Toward Universal Flu Vaccine
Texas Tech University

Thanks to a five-year, $3.46 million grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Texas Tech University researchers Harvinder Gill and Steve Presley have teamed up to develop a universal flu vaccine.

Released: 10-Jan-2019 1:00 PM EST
What You Need to Know to Stay Healthy This Flu Season
University of Michigan

Arnold Monto, professor of epidemiology at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, has been studying the spread of the flu virus and the effectiveness of vaccines and antiviral medications for more than five decades.

Released: 8-Jan-2019 5:05 PM EST
Who knew this about flu? Five hidden benefits of getting your flu shot
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Getting the flu vaccine is not only your best shot at beating the virus – it could help in other ways you may never have realized.

Released: 7-Jan-2019 9:45 AM EST
Personalized vaccine to be tested for the first time in patients with kidney cancer
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

By pairing a novel personalized cancer vaccine with a more established immunotherapy drug that is administered to patients in an innovative fashion, scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute are testing a first-of-its-kind strategy aimed at improving outcomes for kidney cancer patients who are at high risk of recurrence following surgery.

Released: 7-Jan-2019 9:05 AM EST
Flu Vaccine Supply Gaps Can Intensify Flu Seasons, Make Pandemics Deadlier
Georgia Institute of Technology

Gaps in the logic of how we restock flu vaccines may be costing hundreds of lives, or more. A new model to tweak the gaps could save hundreds to hundreds of thousands of people and millions to multiple millions in medical costs.

Released: 21-Dec-2018 4:05 PM EST
University of Maryland School of Dentistry Researcher Seeks New Adjuvants for Vaccines
University of Maryland, Baltimore

Ernst-led team will evaluate adjuvants for both antigen- and dose-sparing capabilities, which may result in decreased cost of vaccines and improved compliance in the battle against infectious diseases.

Released: 19-Dec-2018 9:00 AM EST
Study Suggests Universal Meningitis Vaccination Is Not Cost-Effective For College Students
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A computer-generated model developed by Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers adds to evidence that providing universal vaccination against meningitis B infection to students entering college may be too costly to justify the absolute number of cases it would prevent. The study also suggests that if vaccine developers could significantly lower the price, universal vaccination might be worth requiring on college campuses.

Released: 18-Dec-2018 9:00 AM EST
Vaccine, Checkpoint Drugs Combination Shows Promise for Pancreatic Cancers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center discovered a combination of a cancer vaccine with two checkpoint drugs reduced pancreatic cancer tumors in mice, demonstrating a possible pathway for treatment of people with pancreatic cancers whose response to standard immunotherapy is poor.

Released: 17-Dec-2018 2:05 PM EST
AACI Joins American Cancer Society & Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to Recognize High HPV Vaccination Rates
Association of American Cancer Institutes (AACI)

The HPV Vaccine is Cancer Prevention Champion Award program is a joint effort to increase the number of American young adults completing the full human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine series.

Released: 13-Dec-2018 2:05 PM EST
Genetically modified pigs resist infection with the classical swine fever virus
PLOS

Researchers have developed genetically modified pigs that are protected from classical swine fever virus (CSFV), according to a study published December 13 in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Hongsheng Ouyang of Jilin University, and colleagues. As noted by the authors, these pigs offer potential benefits over commercial vaccination and could reduce economic losses related to classical swine fever.

   
Released: 13-Dec-2018 12:05 PM EST
Cancer patients face higher risk for shingles, new vaccines hold promise for prevention
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

People newly diagnosed with cancer, particularly blood cancers, and those treated with chemotherapy have a greater risk of developing shingles, according to a new study in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. The findings may help guide efforts to prevent the often painful skin condition in cancer patients through the use of new vaccines. The large prospective study expands on previous research by examining the risk of shingles before and after a new cancer diagnosis and across a range of cancer types among approximately 240,000 adults in Australia from 2006 to 2015.

Released: 11-Dec-2018 4:05 PM EST
FSU researchers find racial inequity among adolescents receiving flu vaccine
Florida State University

Black adolescents living in the United States tend to receive the influenza vaccine at significantly lower rates than their white and Hispanic counterparts, according to Florida State University researchers. A new study, led by former FSU graduate student Noah Webb, along with current graduate student Benjamin Dowd-Arrow and Associate Professors of Sociology Miles Taylor and Amy Burdette, was recently published in Public Health Reports.



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