Nanotechnologies Applied in Biomedical Vaccines ( Micro and Nanotechnologies for Biotechnology )

Publication series : Micro and Nanotechnologies for Biotechnology

Author: Yuan-Chuan Chen Hwei-Fang Cheng Yi-Chen Yang and Ming-Kung Yeh  

Publisher: IntechOpen‎

Publication year: 2016

E-ISBN: INT6153063453

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9789535125303

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9789535125310

Subject: O469 Condensed Matter Physics

Keyword: 凝聚态物理学

Language: ENG

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Nanotechnologies Applied in Biomedical Vaccines

Description

Vaccination, one of the most effective strategies to prevent infectious diseases, is the administration of antigenic materials to stimulate an individual’s immune system to develop adaptive immunity to a specific pathogen. Though it is so advantageous for diseases control and prevention, vaccines still have some limitations. Nanotechnology is an approach to prepare a novel biomedicine vaccine with the vaccine consumption and side effects significantly decreased. Regulation is the most important criterion for the development of nanovaccines. All marketing products have to meet the requirement of regulation. The fast-track designation potentially aids in the development and expedites the review of nanovaccines that show promises in an unmet medical need. Here, some successful nanovaccine products are introduced—Inflexal® V, Epaxal®, GardasilTM, and CervarixTM have been widely used for the clinical applications, which are delivered either in the form of virosomes or virus-like particles. Vaccines based on nanotechnology may overcome their original disadvantages and lead to the development of painless, safer, and more effective products.

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