To examine the contribution that field efficacy studies made to the assessment of marketing authorisation (MA) applications, a retrospective analysis was conducted for 100 veterinary vaccines that had been evaluated by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) between 1996 and 2017. For 52 veterinary vaccines, scrutiny of the European Public Assessment Report (EPAR) and/or the summary of product characteristics (SPC) identified objective evidence that field efficacy studies made an important or substantial impact on the efficacy claims and/or benefit-risk evaluation. For 24 applications, the contribution of field efficacy studies was classified as either supportive or was not detectable from the publicly available documents on which the analysis was based.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEffective alternatives to antibiotics (ATA) such as vaccines, antibodies, phage therapies, prebiotics, probiotics and herbal medicines can be used in place of traditional antibiotics in a way that does not compromise animal health as means of tackling the growing threat to both animal and human health from antimicrobial resistance (AMR). This paper reflects the key points on the approaches that were discussed during the 2nd International Symposium on ATA between regulatory agencies, veterinary product companies representing largely the pharmaceutical and feed-additive sectors, academia and other stakeholders on regulatory pathways to enable the licensing of alternatives to antibiotics for food producing animals. The need to demonstrate compliance with generally accepted standards for quality, safety and efficacy is considered a pre-requisite for all veterinary medicinal products receiving an authorisation including ATA, irrespective of the region in which they are approved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo experimental parainfluenza type 3 virus (PI3V) challenge studies were undertaken to evaluate the efficacy of a single intranasal dose of an attenuated live vaccine containing modified live bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) and temperature-sensitive PI3V in 3-week-old calves. In the first study, vaccine efficacy was evaluated in colostrum deprived calves. Nasal shedding of PI3V was highly significantly reduced in vaccinated calves challenged 10 days or 21 days after vaccination.
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