Béatrice Laupèze, Robbert van der Most, Giuseppe Del Giudice
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Novel Technologies to Improve Vaccines for Older Adults.
Vaccine development has traditionally been driven by the need to prevent high numbers of childhood deaths due to infectious disease. With few exceptions, vaccines for adults are the same as vaccines for infants, although it has long been apparent that they become less effective as age increases. It is only in the last few years that concerted efforts have commenced to develop life-long vaccination strategies through into older age. Impressive progress has been made in the field of vaccine technologies which, when they will be applied to vaccination of older adults, could change the landscape for disease prevention in this age group. The recently licensed adjuvanted herpes zoster vaccine shows that immunosenescence need not be a barrier to highly effective vaccination, and that highly effective vaccines for older adults can be achieved with good vaccine design. One of the greatest public health challenges of the 21st century is ensuring the health and well-being of the aged. New or improved vaccines targeting pathogens with a high disease burden in older adults have the potential to major contributions to the longevity and productivity of the older aged population.
期刊介绍:
At a time when interest in the process of aging is driving more and more research, ''Interdisciplinary Topics in Gerontology and Geriatrics'' offers investigators a way to stay at the forefront of developments. This series represents a comprehensive and integrated approach to the problems of aging and presents pertinent data from studies in animal and human gerontology. In order to provide a forum for a unified concept of gerontology, both the biological foundations and the clinical and sociological consequences of aging in humans are presented. Individual volumes are characterized by an analytic overall view of the aging process, novel ideas, and original approaches to healthy aging as well as age-related functional decline.