Objective 1.2: Develop and implement a sustainable investment strategy with the private sector that allows flexibility in financing for advanced development, licensure, and manufacturing of current and promising new vaccine candidates and vaccine production platforms. | Estimate the cost of expanding and diversifying domestic vaccine-manufacturing capacity to use innovative, faster, and more scalable technologies, including cell-based and recombinant vaccine manufacturing, through cost-sharing agreements with the private sector, which shall include an agreed-upon pricing strategy during a pandemic (EO: 4(a)(i)(A)) Estimate the cost of expanding domestic production capacity of adjuvants in order to combine such adjuvants with both seasonal and pandemic influenza vaccines (EO: 4(a)(i)(B)) Estimate the cost of expanding domestic fill-and-finish capacity to rapidly fulfill antigen and adjuvant needs for pandemic response (EO: 4(a)(i)(C)) Evaluate incentives for the development and production of vaccines by private manufacturers and public-private partnerships, including, in emergency situations, the transfer of technology to public-private partnerships — such as the HHS Centers for Innovation and Advanced Development and Manufacturing or other domestic manufacturing facilities — in advance of a pandemic, in order to be able to ensure adequate domestic pandemic manufacturing capacity and capability (EO: 4(a)(i)(E)) Provide OMB with a cost estimate for transitioning DoD’s annual procurement of influenza vaccines to vaccines manufactured both domestically and through faster, scalable, and more innovative technologies (EO: 4(b)(i)) The Secretary of VA shall provide OMB with a cost estimate for transitioning its annual procurement of influenza vaccines to vaccines manufactured both domestically and through faster, scalable, and more innovative technologies (EO: 4(c)) |
Strategic Objective 2: Promote Innovative Approaches and Use of New Technologies to Detect, Prevent, and Respond to Influenza | Objective 2.2: Improve influenza vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics using an aligned and integrated research agenda across government agencies, the private sector, and academic institutions to facilitate the transition to alternative technologies. | Support, in coordination with the DOD, NIH, and VA, a suite of clinical studies featuring different adjuvants to support development of improved vaccines and further expand vaccine supply by reducing the dose of antigen required (EO: 4(a)(i)(F)) Update, in coordination with other relevant public health agencies, the research agenda to dramatically improve the effectiveness, efficiency, and reliability of influenza vaccine production (EO: 4(a)(i)(G)) Identify opportunities to use DoD’s vaccine research and development enterprise, in collaboration with HHS, to include both early discovery and design of influenza vaccines, as well as later stage evaluation of candidate influenza vaccines (EO: 4(b)(iv)) Direct, in coordination with the VA, CDC, and other components of HHS, the conduct of epidemiologic studies of vaccine effectiveness to improve knowledge of the clinical effect of the currently licensed influenza vaccines (EO: 4(b)(ii)) Use DoD’s network of clinical research sites to evaluate the effectiveness of licensed influenza vaccines, including methods of boosting their effectiveness (EO: 4(b)(iii)) Accelerate, in collaboration with HHS, research regarding rapidly scalable prophylactic influenza antibody approaches to complement a universal vaccine initiative and address gaps in current vaccine coverage (EO: 4(b)(vii)) Expand vaccine effectiveness studies to more rapidly evaluate the effectiveness of cell based and recombinant influenza vaccines relative to egg-based vaccines (EO 4(a)(iv)(A)) Further support the conduct, in collaboration with the DoD, BARDA, CDC, of applied scientific research regarding developing cell lines and expression systems that markedly increase the yield of cell-based and recombinant influenza vaccine manufacturing processes (EO 4(a)(iii)(C)) Investigate, in collaboration with HHS, alternative correlates of immune protection that could facilitate the development of next generation influenza vaccines (EO: 4(b)(v)) |
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