Blades and barriers: Oral vaccines for conquering cancers and warding off infectious diseases
Article 2025 en
Authors
KY
Kun Yang
JL
Jinhua Liu
YZ
Yi‐Chang Zhao
Abstract
1 min read
Global public health faces substantial challenges from malignant tumors and infectious diseases. Vaccination provides an approach for treating and preventing these diseases. Oral vaccinations are particularly advantageous in disease treatment and prevention due to their non-invasive nature, high patient compliance, convenience, cost-effectiveness, and capacity to stimulate comprehensive and adaptive immune responses. However, the overwhelming majority of oral vaccines remain in experimental development, struggling with clinical and commercial translation due to their suboptimal efficacy. Thus, enhancing scientists' understanding of the interaction between vaccines and gastrointestinal immune system, creating antigen delivery systems suitable for the gut mucosal environment, developing more potent antigenic epitopes, and using personalized combination therapies are critical for advancing the next generation of oral vaccines. This article explores the fundamental principles and applications of current oral anti-tumor and anti-infective vaccines and discusses considerations necessary for designing future oral vaccines.
Elisabeth A. Dulfer, Konstantin Föhse, Esther Taks, Simone J.C.F.M. Moorlag, Eva L. Koekenbier, Josephine van de Maat, Jaap ten Oever, Jacobien J. Hoogerwerf, Cornelis H. van Werkhoven, Marc J. M. Bonten, Astrid van Hylckama Vlieg, Frits R. Rosendaal, Mihai G. Netea
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