A major goal of the US Department of Defense (DOD) Transformational Medical Technologies Initiative (TMTI) is to develop countermeasures that will protect military personnel against bioweapons, including specific infectious-disease agents and toxins. An explicit TMTI objective is to respond quickly to such threats by producing an appropriate amount of an effective countermeasurecurrently defined as enough material to treat or vaccinate 3 million personnelwithin 12 months of identification of a specific threat. DOD officials call for TMTI programs to be up and running by 2014. The National Academies hosted a workshop which brought together scientists from academe, government, and the biotechnology industry to identify and discuss challenges and ideas related to the TMTI’s vision of developing countermeasures within a few months after an agent is identified. The workshop focused on manufacturing processes and specifically on the development of "manufacturing platforms"repeatable components of manufacturing that reduce both development time and risk. An underlying assumption was that demonstrating that integrated platforms can reliably produce safe and efficacious countermeasures might shorten the regulatory approval process. The workshop is summarized in this book.
Board on Life Sciences & Division on Earth and Life Studies
Considerations for Ensuring Safety and Efficacy of Vaccines and Therapeutic Proteins Manufactured by Using Platform Approaches [PDF ebook]
Summary of a Workshop
Considerations for Ensuring Safety and Efficacy of Vaccines and Therapeutic Proteins Manufactured by Using Platform Approaches [PDF ebook]
Summary of a Workshop
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Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 38 ● ISBN 9780309153225 ● Editor India Hook-Barnard & Jeffrey Fox ● Editorial National Academies Press ● Publicado 2010 ● Descargable 3 veces ● Divisa EUR ● ID 7141605 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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