학술논문

Predicting the next pandemic: VACCELERATE ranking of the World Health Organization's Blueprint for Action to Prevent Epidemics
Document Type
article
Author
Jon Salmanton-GarcíaPauline WipflerJanina LecklerPontus NauclérPatrick W. MallonPatricia C.J.L. Bruijning-VerhagenHeinz-Joseph SchmittUllrich BetheOle F. OlesenFiona A. StewartKerstin AlbusOliver A. CornelyMartin BuschUlrike SeifertAndreas WidmerMiki NagaoJordi RelloTatina TodorovaSabina CviljevićChristopher H. HeathLigita JančorienėThea Koelsen FischerHans Martin OrthIsik Somuncu JohansenMehmet DoymazAthanasios TragiannidisThomas LöscherJin-Fu XuPetr HusaJosé Antonio OteoMohammad I. IssackMarkus ZeitlingerRoger Le GrandPrzemysław ZdziarskiFatih DemirkanPaloma Merino AmadorTomás García-LozanoQing CaoLourdes VázquezJuan Pablo CaeiroPeter HermansShahroch NahrwarKorkut AvsarDeepak KumarNorma FernándezMasoud MardaniEsther SegalAngelo PanDespoina GkentziGeorgia GioulaJorge Alberto CortésJoaquim OliveiraPierre van DammeMohd Zaki Bin Mohd ZailiSpinello AntinoriBirutė ZablockienėGeorgios PapazisisChioma Inyang AnekeMaricela ValerioSamuel McConkeyAvinash AujayebAnna Maria AzziniJelena RoganovićKristin Greve-Isdahl MohnPeter KremsnerEffrossyni Gkrania-KlotsasDora CorzoNina KhannaTomasz SmiataczSimone ScheithauerMaria MerelliBoris KlempaRadovan VrḫovacAntonio RuggieroPankaj ChaudharyJulio Maquera-AfarayMiquel EkkelenkampPavel JindraNikola PantićGemma Jiménez GuerraGuenter WeissBehrad RoohiChristos D. ArgyropoulosSven Aprne SilfverdalJens van PraetZumrut Sahbudak BalSouha KanjBarnaby YoungZoi Dorothea PanaEmmanuel RoilidesStephen C. StearnsJoost WautersJesús Rodríguez BañoMathias W. PletzMaja TravarSteven KühnFernando RieraDaniel CornelyVlad Jeni LauraPhilipp KoehlerBrian EleyPravin K. NairSandra CiesekIoana Diana OlaruLaura MarquesEmanuele PontaliAlexandra NaunheimAdrian LiebMarkus GerhardJoveria Qais FarooqiLance TurtleGustavo Adolfo MéndezRebecca Jane CoxNigel GoodmanBillie CacecaJavier PemánHalima DawoodHelena Hervius AsklingAnders FomsgaardAlejandra Calderón HernándezCornelia StaehelinChia-Ying LiuGiancarlo IcardiElio CastagnolaHelmut J.F. SalzerJens LundgrenSamir JavadliFabio Forghieri
Source
Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease, Vol 57, Iss , Pp 102676- (2024)
Subject
WHO R&D Blueprint for action to prevent epidemics
Pandemic
Influenza viruses
Disease X
SARS-CoV-2
SARS-CoV
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
Language
English
ISSN
1873-0442
Abstract
Introduction: The World Health Organization (WHO)'s Research and Development (R&D) Blueprint for Action to Prevent Epidemics, a plan of action, highlighted several infectious diseases as crucial targets for prevention. These infections were selected based on a thorough assessment of factors such as transmissibility, infectivity, severity, and evolutionary potential. In line with this blueprint, the VACCELERATE Site Network approached infectious disease experts to rank the diseases listed in the WHO R&D Blueprint according to their perceived risk of triggering a pandemic. VACCELERATE is an EU-funded collaborative European network of clinical trial sites, established to respond to emerging pandemics and enhance vaccine development capabilities. Methods: Between February and June 2023, a survey was conducted using an online form to collect data from members of the VACCELERATE Site Network and infectious disease experts worldwide. Participants were asked to rank various pathogens based on their perceived risk of causing a pandemic, including those listed in the WHO R&D Blueprint and additional pathogens. Results: A total of 187 responses were obtained from infectious disease experts representing 57 countries, with Germany, Spain, and Italy providing the highest number of replies. Influenza viruses received the highest rankings among the pathogens, with 79 % of participants including them in their top rankings. Disease X, SARS-CoV-2, SARS-CoV, and Ebola virus were also ranked highly. Hantavirus, Lassa virus, Nipah virus, and henipavirus were among the bottom-ranked pathogens in terms of pandemic potential. Conclusion: Influenza, SARS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2, and Ebola virus were found to be the most concerning pathogens with pandemic potential, characterised by transmissibility through respiratory droplets and a reported history of epidemic or pandemic outbreaks.