An inactivated multivalent influenza A virus vaccine is broadly protective in mice and ferrets

2021 
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) present major public health threats from annual seasonal epidemics, from pandemics caused by novel virus subtypes, and from viruses adapted to a variety of animals including poultry, pigs and horses. Vaccines that broadly protect against all such IAVs, so-called "universal" influenza vaccines, do not currently exist, but are urgently needed. This study demonstrates that an inactivated, multivalent whole virus vaccine, delivered intramuscularly or intranasally, is broadly protective against challenges with multiple IAV HA/NA subtypes in both mice and ferrets, including challenges with IAV subtypes not contained in the vaccine. This vaccine approach indicates the feasibility of eliciting broad "universal" IAV protection, and identifies a promising candidate for influenza vaccine clinical development. One-Sentence SummaryAn inactivated, whole avian influenza virus vaccine delivered intramuscularly or intranasally provides extremely broad protection against antigenically divergent viral challenge and is a promising candidate for a "universal" influenza virus vaccine.
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