The Sanofi Pasteur Vaccine Challenge Unit, a first in Canada, was a key feature in Fridays official opening of the Canadian Center for Vaccinology at the IWK Health Centre in Halifax.
The challenge unit, which is equipped with10 in-patient isolation rooms, may accelerate vaccination development, according to Canadian Center for Vaccinology director and AV整氈窒 professor Dr. Scott Halperin.
What the challenge unit allows us to do is to under controlled circumstances immunize individuals with the candidate vaccine and then expose them to the infection and very quickly, within weeks, say, Did it work or didnt it work? he says. This allows a company or a developer of a vaccine to say, Yes, we should proceed aggressively or No, lets stop here, drop back and re-focus and modify to see if we can get things to work better. That can cut years off the development.
The multidisciplinary Canadian Center for Vaccinology, which houses the challenge unit, is a partnership of AV整氈窒, IWK Health Centre and Capital Health with funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation and provincial government.
The significance of the centre is that its a bringing together of a large number of investigators of a variety of disciplines focused on a single theme of developing vaccines and then evaluating those vaccines and then really looking at how they get into usage, the aspects of health policy, Dr. Halperin says.
The centre will assist industry in testing and evaluating H1N1 vaccines. At Fridays opening, Sanofi Pasteurs Dr. Luis Barreto, Vice President, Immunization Policy and Scientific and Medical Affairs, announced a $1 million contract with the centre for a clinical trial to study Sanofi Pasteurs whooping cough vaccine.
AV整氈窒s Vice-President Research, Dr. Martha Crago, says the centre has great significance for the region. This is exactly what I think this region is capable of...Its a great example of Canadian and international leadership situated right in the middle of Halifax.