NIHR Global Health Research Group on Vaccines for vulnerable people in Africa (VAnguard)

  • Funded by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
  • Total publications:13 publications

Grant number: NIHR134531

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Key facts

  • Disease

    Ebola
  • Start & end year

    2022
    2026
  • Known Financial Commitments (USD)

    $3,461,958.52
  • Funder

    UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
  • Principal Investigator

    Professor Alison Elliott
  • Research Location

    United Kingdom
  • Lead Research Institution

    London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
  • Research Priority Alignment

    N/A
  • Research Category

    Vaccines research, development and implementation

  • Research Subcategory

    N/A

  • Special Interest Tags

    N/A

  • Study Type

    Non-Clinical

  • Clinical Trial Details

    N/A

  • Broad Policy Alignment

    Pending

  • Age Group

    Unspecified

  • Vulnerable Population

    Unspecified

  • Occupations of Interest

    Unspecified

Abstract

Vaccination is a hugely important public health intervention: key to smallpox eradication polio elimination and control of Ebola outbreaks and the COVID-19 pandemic. But not everyone benefits equally. Some vaccines give weaker protection in people from rural tropical settings than in those from high income settings: for example BCG for tuberculosis and oral polio vaccine for polio. Some new vaccines under development also elicit weaker responses in people living in low-income rural settings. The biological reasons for this are not fully understood. Also some people benefit less from vaccines for socioeconomic reasons such as the social context of the communities they live in including limited access to accurate information to aid vaccine choices. Social and biological factors can interact to make communities “vulnerable” in terms of vaccine impact. For example poor people in rural communities with difficulties in vaccine access may also be undernourished or exposed to infections that alter immune responses to vaccination. This needs to be addressed to promote health equity but also to secure maximum global benefit from vaccines: non-immune communities are foci for recurrent disease outbreaks.VAnguard’s goal is to understand how biological and social factors interact to impair vaccine impact in vulnerable African communities in order to develop integrated strategies to optimise vaccine benefits and drive health equity. VAnguard will bring together African and UK experts in vaccine research implementation and stakeholder and community engagement to work in Uganda and Kenya to1.Investigate how biological factors (such as infections nutrition) influence vaccine responses2.Explore how communities perceive and access vaccines what influences them to take up vaccines for themselves and their families and how this relates to social vulnerability biological health status and vaccine information 3.Bring together biological and social data and engage communities to work out how vaccination can best be optimised for vulnerable communities thereby also benefitting entire populations. First we shall work with national stakeholders (such as Ministries of Health and vaccine-related non-governmental organisations) review literature and work on samples from previous studies to identify Ugandan and Kenyan communities likely to have most difficulty in getting the best out of vaccination programmes (“vulnerable communities”). Then with stakeholders and communities we shall co-design the VAnguard Community Study and implement it to investigate in detail which biological and social factors most influence vaccine impact in vulnerable communities. Data and economic modellers will study the results to identify which factors could usefully be modified and we shall work with the communities to explore ways in which this could be done. Hence we shall co-develop strategies which national stakeholders may be able to implement straight away or which can be tested in future studies.The work will be led by young African scientists supported by local and international experts to build capacity for African vaccine research. Biological social and implementation scientists and experts will work closely together to understand each other’s disciplines establishing a culture of collaboration that will foster sustainable pathways to the desired impact: healthy communities.

Publicationslinked via Europe PMC

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View all publications at Europe PMC

Mapping Community Vulnerability to reduced Vaccine Impact in Uganda and Kenya: A spatial Data-driven Approach

Exploring interrelationships between structural, social, and biological determinants of vaccine impact in Kenya and Uganda: VAnguard community mixed methods study protocol

Assessing community vulnerability to reduced vaccine impact in Uganda and Kenya: A spatial data analysis

Helminth driven gut inflammation and microbial translocation associate with altered vaccine responses in rural Uganda.

The effect of intermittent preventive treatment for malaria with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine on vaccine-specific responses among schoolchildren in rural Uganda (POPVAC B): a double-blind, randomised controlled trial.

Schistosome and malaria exposure and urban-rural differences in vaccine responses in Uganda: a causal mediation analysis using data from three linked randomised controlled trials.

The effect of BCG revaccination on the response to unrelated vaccines in urban Ugandan adolescents (POPVAC C): an open-label, randomised controlled trial.

The effect of intensive praziquantel administration on vaccine-specific responses among schoolchildren in Ugandan schistosomiasis-endemic islands (POPVAC A): an open-label, randomised controlled trial.

Pre-vaccination Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm infections are associated with altered vaccine immune responses: a longitudinal analysis among adolescents living in helminth-endemic islands of Lake Victoria, Uganda.