Chikungunya: What Is it, Why Is it Dangerous, and What Is Being Done to Help?
As tropical viruses increase in the US, Infection Control Today wanted to learn more about chikungunya. Here is what we learned.
As tropical viruses show up more often in the United States, Infection Control Today® (ICT®) wanted to get more information about one virus in particular: the chikungunya. To learn more, ICT spoke with Thomas Rademacher, MD, PhD, cofounder of Emergex, who has served as CEO since the company's formation. He is also an emeritus professor of Molecular Medicine at University College London.
Rademacher explains the virus, related viruses, and how Emergex recently signed a contract with the UK Department of Health and Social Care to advance a CD8 T cell-based vaccine candidate against chikungunya.
The name "chikungunya" is derived from the
“Therefore, to generate types of vaccines that will have broad specificity will cross-react, but we're acting with more than one because it's just not practical,” Rademacher said. “If people go to endemic regions where mosquitoes are, you don't know what you're going to get there….The idea here is to use chikungunya as sort of a prototype and develop a vaccine against that. But the hope is, of course, that vaccine will cover other members of the chikungunya family.”
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