
Vaccines save 2.5 million lives each year, and the 270 experimental vaccines in the pipeline could help that number grow.
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Most children in the United States receive 35 vaccination shots by their fifth birthday. (Cue the crying.) That may sound like a lot, but public health experts believe we need even moreāa lot more. The current roster of routine childhood vaccines in the United States protects against 16 infectious diseases, and the World Health Organization estimates that overall, vaccines save 2.5 million lives each year. Yet an even larger number of people die annually from malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS combined.
The good news is that there are a historic number of experimental vaccines in the pipelineā270 and countingāaimed at preventing these 3 global killers, along with 51 other infectious diseases. The new at °µĶųTV Langone Health, launched this year by Mark J. Mulligan, MD, a nationally renowned infectious disease investigator recently recruited from Emory University, will build on this extraordinary momentum through a combination of basic research and clinical trials.
āVaccine research is of the highest importance to humankind,ā says Dr. Mulligan, the Jeffrey P. Bergstein Professor of Medicine and director of the . āWe still lack vaccines for many long-standing diseases, and new threats like Zika and Ebola continue to emerge. The centerās mission is to discover new vaccines to protect and restore human health.ā
Dr. Mulliganās own lab will focus on developing a universal influenza vaccine, a national priority to contain one of the deadliest infectious diseases in the United States, accounting for 80,000 deaths last season alone. The Holy Grail, he says, is a single shot, perhaps with a booster every 5 to 10 years, that inoculates against all influenza strains and eliminates the annual hit-or-miss scramble to predict dominant strains for each flu season.
The center will also investigate therapeutic vaccinesālike the one , professor of microbiology, is developing against HIVāthat train the bodyās immune system to fight existing infections. Itās a fast-growing strategy now being explored to treat everything from Alzheimerās disease to diabetes, but cancer tops the list: currently nearly half of the vaccines in clinical trials target cancerāa trend that Dr. Mulligan, professor of medicine and microbiology, believes will only grow. āCancer vaccines are an exciting field, reinvigorated in the new era of immunotherapy, and we will recruit researchers and collaborate with investigators and clinicians to develop them,ā says Dr. Mulligan.