RESUMO
Therapeutic innovation to address sickle cell disease (SCD) is at a historical apex, characterized by a drug discovery, development, and commercialization landscape that includes potentially curative gene therapies. Given the wide geographic distribution of SCD, with a major presence in Africa, it is imperative that new medicines are designed to meet the specific needs of persons with SCD everywhere. Target product profiles (TPPs) detail the desired attributes of new medicines and serve as a guide for drug developers. To support research efforts for curative treatments for SCD, we mobilized a large multi-disciplinary expert group to generate consensus-driven TPPs for ex vivo and in vivo SCD gene therapies, utilizing a modified Delphi methodology supplemented with virtual workshops. The main findings are TPPs that describe 20 minimal and optimal criteria for novel gene therapy products in categories of scope (3 criteria), performance/safety (11 criteria), manufacturing (4 criteria), and administration (2 criteria). TPPs for ex vivo and in vivo products differed in some performance/safety criteria and all criteria pertaining to manufacturing and administration. These outputs will ideally support development of durable treatments that are safe, efficacious, and practical for persons with SCD in global settings.
RESUMO
In light of the increasing global burden of new HIV infections, growing financial requirements, and shifting funding landscape, the global health community must accelerate the development and delivery of an HIV cure to complement existing prevention modalities. An effective curative intervention could prevent new infections, overcome the limitations of antiretroviral treatment, combat stigma and discrimination, and provide a sustainable financial solution for pandemic control. We propose steps to plan for an HIV cure now, including defining a target product profile and establishing the HIV Cure Africa Acceleration Partnership (HCAAP), a multidisciplinary public-private partnership that will catalyse and promote HIV cure research through diverse stakeholder engagement. HCAAP will convene stakeholders, including people living with HIV, at an early stage to accelerate the design, social acceptability, and rapid adoption of HIV-cure products.