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Chapter category: Vaccines

Inactivated Virus Vaccines

This chapter appears in the following book:

New Vaccine Technologies

Edited by: Ronald W. Ellis
ISBN: 1-58706-050-7
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «

Chapter authors:
Andrew D. Murdin, Benjamin Rovinski, Suryaprakash Sambhara

Inactivated virus vaccines have made a significant contribution to the control of infectious disease during the 20th century and will surely remain an important feature of vaccination strategies in the 21st century. Inactivated vaccines are currently widely available for poliomyelitis, influenza, rabies, hepatitis A, tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) and Japanese encephalitis (JE), and several other products are available for limited, primarily military, use. Inactivated vaccines have been proposed for several other viruses, most notably HIV (see below), hantaviruses1-4 and dengue,5-7 but are not yet licensed. For comprehensive and up-to-date reviews concerning specific products, the reader is referred to the various chapters of Plotkin and Orenstein's definitive work on vaccines.8

In the space available we clearly have to take a selective approach to the subject, so we have divided this chapter into two parts. The first part provides a brief overview of the major inactivated virus vaccines currently available, while the second part considers some of the issues presently facing inactivated virus vaccines, with a particular focus on poliovirus, influenza virus and HIV vaccines. We have chosen these vaccines because these can be considered to represent three different stages in the lifecycle of a vaccine. Poliovirus is likely to follow smallpox as the second human pathogen to be successfully eradicated, which influences and limits the way that polio vaccines will be used and developed in the future. Influenza vaccine is a mature and effective product, but one for which there is both scope and demand for improvement. HIV vaccines have been tested in clinical trials but are still very much a developing technology and as such provide an insight into the future of inactivated virus vaccines. All of these products illustrate the changes which can be expected in the use of inactivated viral vaccines over the next few years; changing patterns of use, increasing use in combination with other products and improving methods of production and formulation.

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