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The US Food and Drug Administration granted Fast Track authorization to LimmaTech Biologics' vaccine candidate targeting the Staphylococcus aureus bacterium, which is a major source of sickness and death around the world, causing infections that are becoming harder to treat as the pathogen develops resistance to traditional antibiotic treatments. There is currently no vaccine to prevent infections caused by S. aureus. The authorization will expedite the review process for the product, which will undergo Phase 1 clinical trial testing later this year.
In two Phase 3 trials, a new combination treatment for patients with virologically suppressed HIV-1 demonstrated promising results, underlining the potential of islatravir in combination with other antiretrovirals to address the treatment needs of people living with HIV. The once-daily, oral, two-drug, single-tablet regimen consists of the investigational drug islatravir and doravirine, which was approved in 2018 as a single-agent treatment and in combination with other drugs. Islatravir is also being studied in other early- and late-stage HIV combination treatment trials.
A recently published study found that an mRNA vaccine designed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Moderna successfully protected ferrets from the avian influenza virus, which continues its worrying spread across the United States. Blood serum taken from immunized ferrets was also able to neutralize a sample of the virus taken from a patient who contracted bird flu after coming into contact with dairy cows, which have been at the center of the outbreak. While there are three avian influenza vaccines approved in the United States, they were designed for past variants of the virus rather than the clade behind the current outbreak, and they are not mRNA vaccines, which, as demonstrated during the COVID-19 pandemic, can be rapidly produced and scaled up in the face of an emergency.