Abstract

We examine the implications of the very low competitiveness of the Brazilian vaccine RD&I system, which precludes the development of all the important vaccines required by the National Immunization Program (NIP), severely impacting the healthcare of the population. In a country dramatically affected by COVID-19 pandemic and by an exponential increase in emerging and neglected diseases, particularly the poor, these RD&I constraints for vaccines become crucial governance issues. Such constraints are aggravated by a global scenario of limited commercial interest from multinational companies in vaccines for neglected and emerging diseases, which are falling into a "valley of death," with only two vaccines produced in a pipeline of 240 vaccines. We stress that these constraints in the global pipeline are a window of opportunity for vaccine manufacturers in Brazil and other developing countries in the current paradigm transition towards Vaccinology 4.0. We conclude with recommendations for a new governance strategy supporting Brazilian public vaccine manufacturers in international collaborations for a sustainable national vaccine development and production plan by 2030.

Highlights

  • Successful national policies for vaccine innovation, technological development and production require adequately understanding the global scientific, technological and market scenarios in which they are embedded

  • We examine here the conditions underlying the very low competitiveness of the national vaccine research, development and innovation (RD&I) system in Brazil, due to lack of an integrated government policy and a low and dispersed financial support for this area, which preclude the development of important vaccines required for the National Immunization Program (NIP)

  • These major constraints to vaccine RD&I and production for emerging and neglected diseases contrast with an exponential increase in the global market for vaccines against other diseases

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Successful national policies for vaccine innovation, technological development and production require adequately understanding the global scientific, technological and market scenarios in which they are embedded. These advances resulted from the important governmental support to the National Immunobiological Self-Sufficiency Program (PASNI), created in the mid-1980s, which has ensured, for more than ten years, the modernization of public vaccine manufacturers and the production of quality vaccine products [25,26,27] This is an area of enormous and rapid evolution that requires new strategies to face the future scenarios of increasing demand for technological competitiveness and self- sustainability. To register new innovative vaccine products, we need hundreds or thousands of good projects at the beginning of the chain

Long-term sustainable financing
Technology transfer and PPD
Regulatory flexibility for preparedness and competitiveness
Epidemic preparedness and vaccine innovation
Findings
Vaccine governance: urgent need for a new framework
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call