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It is hard to overstate
the beneficial effects of immunization.
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According to the US
Centers for Disease Control,
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US children born over the last 20 years --
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for those children, vaccines will prevent
greater than 322 million illnesses,
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greater than 21 million hospitalizations
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and greater than 730,000 deaths,
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with the societal cost savings
of nearly 1.4 trillion dollars.
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Those are big numbers.
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But let's zoom in
and look at a particular example.
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Vaccines have nearly eliminated
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a bacterial infection
called Haemophilus influenzae.
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This bacterium
used to infect young infants
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causing bloodstream infections,
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pneumonia, meningitis, death
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or permanent disability.
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As a young pediatrician,
I saw a few cases.
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You folks probably have never
heard of this disease,
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because vaccines have been so effective.
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You could see in the graph on the right
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that since the introduction of vaccines,
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the incidence of Haemophilus
bacterial infections
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has plummeted like a rock,
and it's nearly vanished.
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So vaccines are generally a success story.
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But we also face challenges.
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For one, for most vaccines,
we need to give multiple doses
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to achieve or maintain protection.
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The scientific community is working
on developing single-shot vaccines.
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Imagine being able to get only one
influenza shot your whole life
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and not having to get
a seasonal flu vaccine.
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Certain microbes
are difficult to immunize against.
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A classic example is human
immunodeficiency virus, or HIV.
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The need is urgent,
progress is being made;
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we're not there yet.
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Another critical element
in vaccine research right now
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is optimizing vaccines
for the most vulnerable among us,
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the very young and the elderly.
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And this is an active area of research.
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Finally, one of the biggest challenges
we unfortunately face right now
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are anti-vax attitudes.
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In fact, it's alarming that over 100,000
infants and children in the United States
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have not received any vaccines,
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and that number is growing.
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In fact, the World Health
Organization, or WHO,
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has declared anti-vax attitudes
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as one of the 10 most important
threats to human health
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in the world today.
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This graphic illustrates
the spread of anti-vax sentiment
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in the state of California,
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from the year 2000 to 2013,
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by looking at the percentage
of public kindergarten students
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who claim the personal exemption
against immunization.
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Anti-vax sentiment is on the rise,
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and it has very real consequences.
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Many of you may be aware of the fact
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that we're seeing infections
that we thought we conquered long ago
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coming back.
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Measles outbreaks have been reported
in multiple US states.
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And many have forgotten,
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but measles is very
infectious and dangerous.
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Just a few viral particles
can infect an individual.
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And there have been even reports
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at sporting events
and at an Olympic stadium
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where the virus, through the air,
travels long distances
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and infects a vulnerable
person in the crowd.
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In fact, if I had
a measles cough right now,
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(Coughs)
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somebody in the back
of this auditorium could get infected.
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And this has had
very real-world consequences.
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Just a few months ago,
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an airline stewardess
contracted measles on a flight,
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the virus entered her brain
and caused encephalitis,
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and she died.
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So people are now dying
due to this anti-vax sentiment.
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I do want to take a few minutes
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to address those
who don't believe in vaccines
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and who resist vaccines.
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As a pediatrician who receives
my yearly flu vaccination,
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as a parent of three children
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who have been vaccinated according
to the recommended schedule,
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and as a pediatric infectious
disease consultant
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who has taken care
of young children with meningitis
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that would have been preventable
had their parents accepted immunization,
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this is a personal matter to me.
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Let's take a look
at who is going to pay the price
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if we start dialing back the amount
of vaccination in our society.
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This graph depicts, on the Y axis,
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the number of individuals
dying of infection in the world.
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And on the X axis,
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the age of the individuals who are dying.
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And as you can see,
it's very much a U-shaped distribution,
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and it's particularly stark
in the very young ages.
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So vaccines shield
the very young from infection.
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And if we want to talk, my friends,
about what vaccines cause,
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because there's a lot of speculation,
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unfounded speculation on the internet,
of what vaccines cause,
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vaccines cause adults, OK?
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That's what they cause.
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And the other thing that they cause
is for elderly individuals to live longer.
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Because they are shielded
against influenza
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and other killers of the elderly.
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Now, let's talk a little bit
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about how we can improve
vaccines even further.
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We can create vaccines that can immunize
the most vulnerable among us
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and perhaps even vaccines
that protect with single shots.
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Let me go over a little bit
of the immunology.
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In the top panel, what you see
is a simple vaccine.
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All vaccines contain
something called an antigen.
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The antigen is like a piece
of a germ, of a microbe,
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that your body remembers, right?
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It forms antibodies
and those antibodies can protect you.
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So those kind of vaccines
can induce an immune response,
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but as you see here,
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that immune response
tends to go up and back down,
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and you need to get another dose
and another dose
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to maintain protection.
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What can we do?
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We and other scientists around the world
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are finding molecules
that can boost a vaccine response.
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Those are called adjuvants,
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from the Latin "adjuvare," to help or aid.
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Adjuvants are molecules
we might add to a vaccine
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to get a stronger response.
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And in the presence of the adjuvant,
depicted here in red,
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you have a much more profound
activation of the white blood cells
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of your immune system,
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and generate a much more
profound immune response,
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with much higher antibody
levels, more rapidly,
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and that lasts a long time
for durable immunity.
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Interestingly, these adjuvants
have different effects
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depending on the age or other demographic
factors of the individual.
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Which brings me to the notion
of precision vaccines.
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This is the idea that we will take
precision medicine --
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you know what precision
medicine is, right,
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that's the idea that populations may vary
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in their response
to a particular medicine --
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and apply that to vaccines.
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Right?
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And here in Boston Children's Hospital
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at the Precision Vaccines
Program I direct,
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we have five approaches,
stepwise approaches we take,
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to build precision vaccines
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that are tailored
to vulnerable populations.
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Number one,
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we need to understand
what the attitude of a given population is
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towards a vaccine.
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You could build the most
sophisticated vaccine in the world,
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but if nobody wants to take it,
you're going nowhere.
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Number two,
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we have to think
of the route of immunization.
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Most vaccines are intramuscular, or IM,
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but there are others,
intranasal, oral and others.
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Then, as I just described to you,
vaccines have components.
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All vaccines have an antigen,
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that's the part of the microbe
that your body remembers,
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that you might make antibodies
or cell-mediated immunity against.
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And we might add an adjuvant,
as we talked about,
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to boost an immune response.
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But guess what?
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There are many different
antigens to choose from
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and many different adjuvants.
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How are we going to make that decision?
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And the menu of these keeps growing.
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So on our team,
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we've developed ways
to test vaccines outside the body --
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in Latin, that's "in vitro" --
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in a tissue culture dish.
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So we use tissue engineering
with blood cells
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to immunize outside the body
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and study the effect of the vaccine
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against, for example, infants
or elderly individuals or others.
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And if you think about it,
this is critical,
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because if you look at all the infections
we want to build vaccines against,
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like Zika virus and Ebola virus
and HIV and others,
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all the candidate antigens,
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all the candidate adjuvants,
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all the different populations,
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it's going to be impossible to do
large, phase III clinical trials
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for every combination.
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This is where we think being able
to test vaccines outside the body
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can make a big difference
to accelerate vaccine development.
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And finally, this whole effort
is to drive an immune response
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that will protect against
that particular pathogen,
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getting antibodies and other cells
to defend the body.
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We are also using additional
innovative approaches
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to bring the most cutting-edge science
to vaccine development.
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We're taking a deeper dive
as to how current vaccines protect.
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We've formed an international consortium
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to study how hepatitis B vaccine
protects newborns
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from hepatitis B infection.
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And to do this,
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we've developed a technique
called small sample, big data.
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We can get a tiny little drop
of baby blood before immunization,
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and take a tiny little drop
after immunization,
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and we can measure the inventory
of all the cells,
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and all the genes and all the molecules
in that drop of blood,
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and we can compare after the vaccine
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to before the vaccine in that same baby
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and understand in a deep way
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exactly how that successful
vaccine protects.
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And those lessons we can use
to build the next vaccines in the future.
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So this diagram is really illustrating
a tiny drop of blood
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yielding huge amounts of information,
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tens of thousands of analytes,
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and that hairball is meant to depict
the gene pathways that are turned on
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and the molecular pathways
that are turned on.
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So much more to come on that,
and very exciting science.
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So we are partnering
with scientists around the world
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to bring all these new technologies
to invigorate vaccine development
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in a Precision Vaccines network.
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We are going to advance
personalized vaccines
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for vulnerable populations
around the world.
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Our team includes scientists,
technical experts and physicians.
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And we're developing vaccines
against infectious diseases
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like pertussis, which is whooping cough.
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We have a whooping cough vaccine,
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but it requires multiple doses,
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and the immunity keeps dropping.
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We want to develop a single-shot
pertussis vaccine.
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We're working on a vaccine
for respiratory syncytial virus,
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the number one cause of infant
hospitalization in the United States.
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A better vaccine against influenza,
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and, of course, HIV.
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We're also looking at vaccines
against cancer, allergy
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and, interestingly, opioid overdose.
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So, this is my final message to you.
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Vaccines protect you and your loved ones
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and the people around you.
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Not only do they protect you
against infection,
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they prevent you
from spreading it to others.
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Get immunized.
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Scientific progress is fragile
and can be lost.
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We must foster accurate
and respectful public dialogue.
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And finally, we're on the verge
of great things,
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a new era of vaccination.
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We've just scratched the surface
of what can be accomplished.
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Please advocate for this research.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)