Dr. Osterholm said that despite recent advances in vaccine research, he would like to see the pace of those efforts accelerate. "We clearly need to support efforts to bring us new novel vaccine antigens that have a much wider breadth of protection, a much longer reach in protection in terms of time, and across the variety of populations. Since influenza vaccine is now recommended for everyone, such studies would need comparison groups that receive licensed vaccines and are powered to show superiority rather than non-inferiority."
"The bottom line is we have to recognize we need these vaccines and we need them now. If this paper does anything, it’s a clarion call that we need to really fast-forward our novel influenza vaccine program forward, and quickly," Dr. Osterholm said. "But in the meantime, we should maintain public support for the present vaccines that are the best intervention available for seasonal influenza."
The analysis, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, is part of a much larger CIDRAP report on influenza vaccine that is due out later this year.
Dr. Osterholm stated that neither he nor his coauthors have any financial disclosures.