Beyond BCG: the potential for a more effective TB vaccine.

I M Orme
Author Information
  1. I M Orme: Mycobacteria Research Laboratories, Department of Microbiology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA. iorme@lamar.colostate.edu

Abstract

The 'Bacille Calmette-Guerin' (BCG) vaccine has been used throughout most parts of the world for the majority of the century. It is safe to use and cheap to produce, but there have been increasing doubts about its effectiveness. These doubts could not come at a worse time, as tuberculosis (TB) rates continue to rise, compounded by the AIDS epidemic, and outbreaks of tuberculosis caused by multidrug-resistant strains are more common even in advanced countries. As a result, there is now a concerted research effort to produce new TB vaccine candidates. These include DNA vaccines, recombinant and auxotrophic vaccines and subunit vaccines, all of which hold promise. The real difficulty will probably arise at the clinical trial level, when a decision must be made either to replace BCG or to boost existing BCG-induced immunity using these new-generation vaccines.

Grants

  1. AI-75320/NIAID NIH HHS

MeSH Term

AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections
Animals
BCG Vaccine
Bacterial Vaccines
Child
Clinical Trials as Topic
Forecasting
Genetic Vectors
Guinea Pigs
Health Policy
Humans
Mice
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Prevalence
T-Lymphocyte Subsets
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
Vaccination
Vaccines, DNA
Vaccines, Synthetic

Chemicals

BCG Vaccine
Bacterial Vaccines
Vaccines, DNA
Vaccines, Synthetic

Word Cloud

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