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Chapter category: Vaccines

Protein-Based 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:
Sheena M. Loosmore, Gavin R. Zealey, and Raafat E.F. Fahim

The introduction of inactivated vaccines for viral or bacterial diseases such as smallpox, polio, pertussis, tuberculosis, measles, mumps and rubella has led to the eradication or control of these diseases. The early vaccines, though effective, were often crude and poorly characterized. The advent of purified subunit vaccines using native or recombinant proteins has led to the development of modern well-characterized vaccines for diseases such as hepatitis B and pertussis. There are still many infectious diseases for which new or improved vaccines are needed, e.g., AIDS, diarrheal diseases, hemorrhagic fevers, malaria and other parasitic diseases, tuberculosis and other respiratory diseases, and prion diseases. Immunotherapy for, or prevention of, cancer and autoimmune diseases is a new and exciting application of vaccinology. This chapter has been organized into the following topics: pediatric vaccines, adult vaccines, vaccines against nosocomial infections, cancer vaccines, vaccines against autoimmune diseases, current technologies, and emerging technologies.

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