CAG Translational Vaccine Research in High-Risk Adults (VAX)
Adults in high-risk groups – including the elderly, individuals with advanced chronic diseases, and those immunosuppressed due to medication or autoimmune disorders – represent a growing population. Despite being highly susceptible to severe infections, these groups are often under-vaccinated and are historically excluded from clinical trials due to safety concerns and uncertainty around vaccine responses. This exclusion creates significant gaps in our understanding of immunological responses, resulting in inequities in evidence-based vaccine recommendations and suboptimal prevention strategies.
The Clinical Academic Group for Translational Vaccine Research in High-Risk Adults (CAG-VAX) aims to 1) establish a clinical research platform that improves vaccine access and facilitates inclusive clinical trials for high-risk adults, 2) study immunological responses to vaccines and develop improved vaccination strategies for these vulnerable populations, and 3) improve our understanding of the epidemiology and burden of vaccine-preventable diseases in these groups.
CAG-VAX will address the critical need for inclusive vaccine research in underrepresented patient groups by creating an innovative clinical, immunological, and public health research platform focused on populations that are often excluded from vaccine clinical trials and have low vaccination uptake.
The CAG-VAX aims to provide access to vaccines for specific high-risk groups, with direct clinical impact on patients, through a newly established clinical infrastructure dedicated to specifically address the needs of these groups. At the societal level, broader vaccine access can reduce the disease burden of the healthcare system. Finally, by combining expertise in medical care, clinical trials, immunology, and epidemiology, CAG-VAX aims to develop evidence-based vaccination strategies for some of the most vulnerable individuals at risk of severe infections.
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CAG Chairs
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Zitta F B Barrella Harboe Clinical professor, Nordsjællands Hospital, Department of Respiratory Medicine and Infectious Diseases
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Lea Klingenberg Barfod Professor, Centre for translational Medicine & Parasitology (CMP), Department of Immunology and Microbiology, EPITOPE team, University of Copenhagen
CAG Junior Chairs
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Christina Ekenberg MD, PhD Department of Respiratory Medicine and Infectious Diseases Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand
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Rahma Elmahdi MD, PhD, Associate Professor, Centre for translational Medicine & Parasitology (CMP), Department of Immunology and Microbiology, EPITOPE team, University of Copenhagen
CAG Key Members
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Kara-Lee Aves Ph.D, Director, External Research and Development, NIVI- Novo Nordisk Foundation Initiative for Vaccines and Immunity
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Lisbet Brandi MD, PhD, Ass. prof. Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Mai Bang Poulsen MD, PhD, Ass. prof. Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Mette Bennedsen MD, PhD, Ass. prof. Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Maria Elisabeth Lendorf MD, PhD, Ass. prof. Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Daniel Bjergaard Reg. Nurse, Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Sanaa Hocine-Ramadan Reg. Nurse Copenhagen University Hospital, North Zealand, Capital Region of Denmark
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Susanne Brix Pedersen Professor MSO, DTU Bioengineering, Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, PSB-Disease Systems Immunology, Technical University of Denmark