Policy brief: Manufacturing new vaccines for pandemics
For vaccines to form part of a viable epidemic or pandemic recovery strategy, they must be available quickly and be manufacturable at scale.
In line with the requirement for a safe and effective vaccine for global recovery from the crisis, the manufacturing of candidate vaccines has already commenced at risk.
If an effective vaccine against the SARS-CoV-2 virus is developed and approved, it must be produced in sufficient quantity and at the lowest cost possible to have maximum impact on a global scale. In part two of two briefings, we will look at how different platform vaccines are manufactured and how adopting flexible manufacturing approaches is likely to have the biggest impact on slowing the COVID-19 pandemic, enabling doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to be delivered most rapidly. Technologies to increase manufacturing capacity in low and middle-income countries are explored.
Funder
This briefing was produced in partnership with UCL STEaPP’s Policy Impact Unit (PIU) as part of the work carried out by the Future Vaccine Manufacturing Research (Vax-Hub). The Vax-Hub is jointly led by UCL and the University of Oxford and funded by the Department of Health and Social Care’s UK Vaccine Network, and managed by the EPSRC.
Lead researchers
Professor Martina Micheletti (Department of Biochemical Engineering), Dr Steve Morris (Department of Biochemical Engineering.
Output type
Policy briefing
PIU Lead
Dr Penny Carmichael
Download the Manufacturing new vaccines for pandemics briefing [PDF]
Last updated: Tuesday, July 6, 2021