For this purpose, a dedicated production facility is being constructed within the Bio Farma premises in Bandung. In parallel, Bio Farma was selected as a grantee of the WHO influenza vaccine technology transfer initiative, which sought to increase access of developing countries to a pandemic influenza vaccine through domestic production capacity. The WHO seed funding for transfer of the technology, procurement of equipment for quality control and production, and formulation and
filling training for seasonal vaccine imported from Biken, complemented the financial contributions of Bio Farma and the Indonesian Government. This article describes the progress made towards the following four objectives of the project: (i) technology transfer for the production of influenza vaccine; (ii) installation and operationalization of a formulation and filling unit; (iii) registration in Indonesia of seasonal vaccine developed from imported bulk antigen;
selleck (iv) production of bulk inactivated influenza antigen for seasonal and pandemic use. Since the existing formulation and filling lines at Bio Farma were fully occupied for routine vaccine production, a new unit was established and fully equipped. Following the transfer from Biken, Japan of the technology to formulate, fill and quality control trivalent seasonal influenza vaccine, three monovalent bulks each of the following strains were received from Biken in December 2007: A/Hiroshima/52/205 (H3N2); A/Solomon Islands/3/2006
Ceritinib purchase (H1N1); B/Malaysia/2506/2004. In 2008, three consecutive Modulators batches were successfully produced from the imported bulk antigen in two presentations: single-dose ampoules for use in clinical trials, and multi-dose vials for stability studies. Within 1 year of the start of the project, candidate seasonal influenza vaccine lots prepared for clinical trial were approved by the National Agency of Drug and Food Control (NADFC) in Indonesia. The results of analyses performed in Indonesia on clinical trial lots were confirmed in samples sent to Biken. In response to a request from NADFC, Bio Farma also carried Phosphatidylinositol diacylglycerol-lyase out a prelicensure bridging study to assess the safety and immunogenicity of the vaccine in 405 adolescents and adults (12–64 years old), randomly assigned to above three bulk batches. A single 0.5 mL dose was administered intramuscularly and blood samples taken before and 28 days after immunization. Results showed that the vaccine induced high antibody titres against influenza antigens in all subjects (≥1:40 haemagglutination inhibition to A/Hiroshima, A/Solomon Island and B/Malaysia strains 97.8%, 98.2% and 95.5%, respectively; p = 0.025). The geometric mean titres after immunization increased (A/Hiroshima: 66.16–323.37; A/Solomon Islands: 41.89–554.26; B/Malaysia: 24.02–231.83), and subjects with a fourfold increase in antibody titre were 61.2%; 85.5%; 81.5%, respectively.