SEATTLE, Dec. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- The Washington Life Sciences Discovery
Fund (LSDF) has awarded nearly $4.7 million to launch the start-up phase of
the Washington Vaccine Alliance (WAVA) and to support initial research into
three new vaccines for E. coli, herpes and syphilis. Announced today, the
grant is funded by Washington's$350 million tobacco-lawsuit-settlement bonus
and provides essential funding to bring this innovative new organization to
life.
WAVA core operations during the initial startup phase will operate within
the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Institute of Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center.
WAVA is a consortium of seven nonprofit-research institutions that is
focused on providing the necessary skills and infrastructure to develop, test
and deploy new or improved vaccines for many of the world's most challenging
diseases. In addition to the Hutchinson Center, the consortium includes
Battelle Pacific Northwest Division, Infectious Disease Research Institute
(IDRI), PATH, Seattle Biomedical Research Institute (SBRI), University of
Washington (UW), and Washington State University (WSU).
"This creative new consortium is a demonstration of the innovation and
determination of the members to bring new vaccine solutions to world," said
Harlan Patterson, executive director of WAVA.
Scientists at WAVA organizations are collectively researching about a
dozen disease clusters that are potential candidates for vaccines and which
have succeeded in winning major internationally focused research grants in
infectious diseases. The WAVA structure will allow the member organizations to
more effectively develop and share critical skills and facilities, help build
economic activity for vaccines in Washington, and position the organizations
to partner with commercial pharmaceutical and biotech companies in the final
vaccine development and deployment stages.
"WAVA represents a chance for the state of Washington to become an
international center recognized for both research and vaccine development,"
said Larry Corey, M.D., principal investigator of the LSDF-funded project and
co-director of the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Institute at the Hutchinson
Center. "The successful development and deployment of even one vaccine will
have a significant impact on the health of the citizens and will provide a
very cost-effective intervention to reduce overall health care costs."
The LSDF award provided critical funding to complete the first phases of
three new vaccine projects and the ability to secure funding for the rest of
the development process. The projects aim to:
-- Develop an E. coli vaccine for cattle (a joint effort of WSU, UW and
the University of Idaho). Researchers will test and identify the best
candidate for a vaccine that would reduce the level of E. Coli O157 in cattle
to a level that would prevent transmission to humans via meat or waste.
-- Develop a herpes vaccine (a joint effort of the Hutchinson Center, IDRI
and UW). Researchers will test and select the most effective vaccine
formulations for phase 1 clinical trials.
-- Develop a syphilis vaccine (a joint effort of UW, IDRI and the
University of Victoria). Researchers will test, evaluate and select the best
vaccine formulation to complete preclinical development and then test in phase
1 clinical trials.
Initially, WAVA will create several core service centers that are critical
to bring vaccines to market: discovery, development, production and
deployment. These services will be extremely cost effective by taking
advantage of existing expertise and sharing these resources across the larger
portfolio of vaccine projects. Member organizations will contract with each
other to speed the testing and development process. The service cores will
each have a lead organization and include vaccine economics (PATH), protein
expression and purification (SBRI), formulation and early testing (IDRI),
proteomics (Battelle), immune monitoring (Hutchinson Center and UW). The
Hutchinson Center will also oversee informatics and clinical trials design and
management.
"Washington state has accumulated a critical mass of expertise in crucial
areas necessary for the successful identification and development of vaccines.
The creation of WAVA provides the catalyst to allow each member to create new
programs that build upon the substantial existing successes," said King
Holmes, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the UW Department of Global Health.
The portfolio of vaccine projects for WAVA covers major infectious
diseases that await the development of effective and affordable vaccines.
These include HIV, hepatitis C, influenza, diarrheal diseases (especially of
infants and children), pneumonia of the elderly, sexually transmitted
infections (such as genital herpes, syphilis, and chlamydia), and the pandemic
infections of tuberculosis and malaria.
"The worldwide recognition of the potential for vaccines -- increased use
of existing, improved and new -- creates the opportunity for the state of
Washington to contribute to an unprecedented reduction of the human and
financial costs of some of our greatest health challenges," said Chris Elias,
M.D., M.P.H., president and CEO of PATH.
At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, our interdisciplinary teams of
world-renowned scientists and humanitarians work together to prevent, diagnose
and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Our researchers, including
three Nobel laureates, bring a relentless pursuit and passion for health,
knowledge and hope to their work and to the world. For more information,
please visit fhcrc.org.
About the Life Sciences Discovery Fund
The Life Sciences Discovery Fund, a Washington State agency established in
May 2005, makes grant investments in innovative life sciences research to
benefit Washington and its citizens. For more information on the Life Sciences
Discovery Fund, visit: http://www.lsdfa.org.
CONTACTS
Dean Forbes Harlan Patterson (WAVA)
206-605-0311 206-434-1164
dforbes@fhcrc.org hpatters@fhcrc.org