New Qld lab to produce personalised cancer vaccines
Tuesday, 30 July, 2024
A new facility at is set to produce cancer vaccines tailored to individual patients.
The lab at UQ鈥檚 will bring together the equipment and expertise to enable the design, manufacture and delivery of new mRNA cancer vaccines.
Supported by $3.3 million funding from the National Critical Research Infrastructure program, the facility will provide the local research community with vaccines that match the specific treatment needs of each patient.
Dr Seth Cheetham, Deputy Director of AIBN鈥檚 BASE facility, said, 鈥淧ersonalised mRNA cancer vaccines are now being used to train the body鈥檚 immune system to recognise and eradicate cancer cells.
鈥淒espite the huge potential, Australian researchers haven鈥檛 had the necessary infrastructure to build these vaccines, leading to a critical gap in the local drug development pipeline.
鈥淭his lab changes that, with a leading team of investigators in a purpose-built space, working with local industry and academics to progress a range of high-quality mRNA cancer vaccine candidates from design through to preclinical evaluation, with the aim of enabling future clinical trials.鈥
The mRNA cancer vaccine hub is expected to be operating in BASE by late 2024. The facility already provides mRNA for research and pilot studies, and since its launch in 2021 has provided academic and industry partners with more than 300 experimental-grade vaccines.
The new lab was one of four UQ projects funded in the latest MRFF grant round, adding to the $6.6 million funding awarded to BASE in 2023 to boost clinical mRNA production capabilities.
AIBN Director Professor Alan Rowan said the hub would complement Australia鈥檚 existing research strengths in oncology and affirm AIBN as a therapeutics and personalised medicine pipeline.
鈥淕overnments and society want sustainable innovation that enables high-quality research and delivers translatable outcomes,鈥 Rowan said.
鈥淭he mRNA cancer vaccine hub is the latest example of how AIBN combines world-class infrastructure and technical expertise to bridge the gap between research and clinical development.鈥
The five-year program will also bring together partner investigators from UQ, QIMR-Berghofer, Mater Research, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and the Queensland Children鈥檚 黑料吃瓜群网.
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