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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Successful vaccines for naturally occurring protozoal diseases of animals should guide human vaccine research. A review of protozoal vaccines and their designs.

Journal:
Parasitology
Year:
2014
Authors:
McAllister, Milton M
Affiliation:
University of Adelaide · Australia

Plain-English summary

This article discusses the successful vaccines developed for protozoal diseases in animals, which could help guide the creation of vaccines for similar diseases in humans. It points out that vaccine development for animals has some advantages, like being able to test them directly in the animals that naturally get the diseases and having fewer safety regulations. Despite the large amount of funding for human vaccine research, there are still no effective vaccines for human protozoal diseases, which is puzzling. The review suggests that researchers should look at the successful veterinary vaccines to improve human vaccine designs. Overall, the article emphasizes the need for better collaboration between veterinary and human vaccine research.

Abstract

Effective vaccines are available for many protozoal diseases of animals, including vaccines for zoonotic pathogens and for several species of vector-transmitted apicomplexan haemoparasites. In comparison with human diseases, vaccine development for animals has practical advantages such as the ability to perform experiments in the natural host, the option to manufacture some vaccines in vivo, and lower safety requirements. Although it is proper for human vaccines to be held to higher standards, the enduring lack of vaccines for human protozoal diseases is difficult to reconcile with the comparatively immense amount of research funding. Common tactical problems of human protozoal vaccine research include reliance upon adapted rather than natural animal disease models, and an overwhelming emphasis on novel approaches that are usually attempted in replacement of rather than for improvement upon the types of designs used in effective veterinary vaccines. Currently, all effective protozoal vaccines for animals are predicated upon the ability to grow protozoal organisms. Because human protozoal vaccines need to be as effective as animal vaccines, researchers should benefit from a comparison of existing veterinary products and leading experimental vaccine designs. With this in mind, protozoal vaccines are here reviewed.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24476952/