Weitzman Elissa R, Alegria Margarita, Caplan Arthur, Dowling David, Evans Jay, Fisher Carl Erik, Jordan Ayana, Kossowsky Joe, Landau Misia, Larson Heidi, Levy Ofer, Levy Sharon, Mnookin Seth, Reif Sharon, Ross Jennifer, Sherman Amy Caryn
Division of Addiction Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, United States; Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, United States; Computational Health Informatics Program, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, United States; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck St, Boston, MA 02115, United States.
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, 50 Staniford St, Boston, MA 02114, United States; Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck St, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck St, Boston, MA, United States.
Vaccine. 2025 Jan 12;44:126324. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.126324. Epub 2024 Sep 23.
Despite significant public health attention and investment, hundreds of thousands of individuals have suffered fatal opioid overdose since the onset of the opioid crisis. Risk of opioid overdose has been exacerbated by the influx of fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, into the drug supply. The National Institutes of Health Helping End Addiction Long-term (HEAL) Initiative is supporting the development of vaccines targeting fentanyl to protect against overdose. If successful, a vaccine would induce anti-fentanyl antibodies to sequester fentanyl (but not other opioids) in the blood, preventing fentanyl from crossing into the brain and reaching the central nervous system where it can cause overdose. Introduction of an overdose preventing strategy that relies on a vaccine to confer passive protection may be impactful. However, vaccines are poorly understood by the public and politicized. Moreover, the overdose ecosystem is complex and extends across numerous social, economic, medical, and cultural systems. As such, optimal use of a vaccine strategy to address overdose may benefit from multidisciplinary consideration of the social, ethical, and systemic factors that influence substance use and overdose that may also impact the acceptability of a fentanyl vaccine and related implementation strategies. In March 2022, Dr. Elissa Weitzman convened a two-day conference at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study on the Social Complexity of a Fentanyl Vaccine to Prevent Opioid Overdose. In all, 19 professionals from diverse disciplines (medicine, psychology, history, ethics, immunology, vaccinology, communications, policy) attended the conference and led discussions that centered on population health and epidemiology, history of medicine and frameworks for understanding substance use, ethics, decision-making and attitudes, and operational issues to the question of a novel immunotherapy targeting fentanyl overdose. Participants also debated the risks and benefits of vaccine administration in response to fictional clinical case vignettes. A summary of the conference presentations and discussions follows.
尽管公众对健康给予了高度关注并投入了大量资金,但自阿片类药物危机爆发以来,仍有数十万人因阿片类药物过量服用而死亡。强效合成阿片类药物芬太尼流入毒品供应渠道,加剧了阿片类药物过量服用的风险。美国国立卫生研究院的“长期帮助终结成瘾”(HEAL)倡议正在支持开发针对芬太尼的疫苗,以预防过量服用。如果成功,疫苗将诱导产生抗芬太尼抗体,在血液中隔离芬太尼(但不包括其他阿片类药物),防止芬太尼进入大脑并到达中枢神经系统,从而避免引发过量服用。引入一种依靠疫苗提供被动保护的过量服用预防策略可能会产生重大影响。然而,公众对疫苗了解甚少,且疫苗已被政治化。此外,过量服用的生态系统非常复杂,涉及众多社会、经济、医疗和文化系统。因此,要想最佳地利用疫苗策略来解决过量服用问题,可能需要多学科考虑那些影响药物使用和过量服用的社会、伦理及系统因素,这些因素也可能影响芬太尼疫苗及相关实施策略的可接受性。2022年3月,艾丽莎·韦茨曼博士在哈佛拉德克利夫高级研究院召开了为期两天的会议,探讨预防阿片类药物过量服用的芬太尼疫苗的社会复杂性。共有来自不同学科(医学、心理学、历史、伦理学、免疫学、疫苗学、传播学、政策学)的19名专业人士参加了此次会议,并主导了相关讨论,这些讨论聚焦于人口健康与流行病学、医学史以及理解药物使用的框架、伦理学、决策与态度,以及针对芬太尼过量服用的新型免疫疗法所涉及的操作问题。与会者还针对虚拟临床病例情景,辩论了接种疫苗的风险和益处。以下是会议演讲和讨论的总结。