Fiche publication


Date publication

avril 2013

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr PRETET Jean-Luc


Tous les auteurs :
Aubert M, Beytout J, Callamand P, Cheymol J, Combadiere B, Dahlab A, Denis F, Dodet B, Dommergues MA, Gagneur A, Gaillat J, Gavazzi G, Gras-le-Guen C, Haas H, Hau-Rainsard I, Malvy D, de Monleon JV, Picherot G, Pinquier D, Pretet JL, Pulcini C, Rabaud C, Regnier F, Rogeaux O, Savagner C, Soubeyrand B, Valdiguie M, Weil-Olivier C

Résumé

Every year, the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases brings together more than 300 participants to review progress in vaccine research and development and identify the most promising avenues of research. These conferences are among the most important scientific meetings entirely dedicated to vaccine research for both humans and animals, and provide a mix of plenary sessions with invited presentations by acknowledged international experts, parallel sessions, poster sessions, and informal exchanges between experts and young researchers. During the Fifteenth Conference that took place in Baltimore in May 2012, various topics were addressed, including the scientific basis for vaccinology; exploration of the immune response; novel vaccine design; new adjuvants; evaluation of the impact of newly introduced vaccines (such as rotavirus, HPV vaccines); vaccine safety; and immunization strategies. The new techniques of systems biology allow for a more comprehensive approach to the study of immune responses in order to identify correlates of protection and to design novel vaccines against chronic diseases such as AIDS or malaria, against which natural immunity is incomplete.

Référence

Arch Pediatr. 2013 Apr;20(4):449-58