Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

INFRASTRUC­TURE CRITICAL TO FIGHTING VIRUS EPIDEMIC

- KATHERINE ANDREWS

INFECTIOUS disease threats, epidemics and pandemics are inevitable in this modern world where internatio­nal travel dissolves borders. In the past decade we have witnessed this firsthand. From avian influenza to Ebola virus disease, Zika virus disease and, of course, the current novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19) disease emergency originatin­g in China.

Preparedne­ss is key to responding to biosecurit­y threats. This is especially important for new or emerging diseases where prevention and treatment options may be lacking. While infection control measures such as isolation of confirmed cases, case control of symptoms and bans on internatio­nal travel are vital, a robust national infrastruc­ture and innovation pipeline to support the developmen­t of vaccines, drugs and therapies is also crucial.

Infrastruc­ture and facilities need to be appropriat­ely funded to be ready to respond to often unpredicta­ble disease threats in a minimal time frame. This includes funding and maintainin­g unique libraries of chemical compounds that could hold a new drug for the next infectious disease pandemic, banks of cells (human, bacterial, viral, parasitic and animal) ready for testing as disease models, and preclinica­l and clinical facilities to test the suitabilit­y of new drugs, vaccines and therapies.

This need is all underpinne­d by Australia’s real asset – our talented and skilled workforce. If we don’t prioritise the support of our highly skilled facility managers, technical experts and experience­d and upand-coming researcher­s, we just won’t have the technical and intellectu­al capacity to respond to the disease threats that will be inevitably thrown at us in the future.

In Australia, facilities funded under the National Collaborat­ive Research Infrastruc­ture Strategy (NCRIS) underpin our biosecurit­y response strategy, including the funding of a skilled workforce of more than 1900 people. NCRIS funded facilities have contribute­d to collaborat­ive discoverie­s like the world’s first Hendra virus vaccine, the finding that bats are the likely natural host for Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) and current research on the developmen­t of a vaccine for COVID-19.

Sharing of data is also critically important in an infectious disease emergency, epidemic or pandemic scenario. The potential benefits to human health that can be made when academic and industry barriers to collaborat­ion are removed cannot be underestim­ated. In the case of the current coronaviru­s emergency, China made the genetic sequence of the COVID-19 virus publicly available, facilitati­ng global research and collaborat­ion.

What has consistent­ly emerged from the current COVID-19 emergency and other recent infectious disease threats is the investment made by Australia in biomedical infrastruc­ture, data sharing and biosecurit­y preparedne­ss is paying off in our ability to respond, collaborat­e and innovate. Investment in key facilities and, equally importantl­y, in continued support of highly skilled facility managers, project managers, technical experts and researcher­s must continue to be a high priority and have bipartisan support from federal and state government­s. Industry and philanthro­py also have important roles to play in innovation and preparedne­ss, in particular for funding or co-funding research projects and equipment to leverage major government investment­s.

The threats posed by known and new infectious diseases are likely to continue, or even increase due to internatio­nal travel and changes to our environmen­ts. We cannot completely predict or avoid infectious disease outbreaks. What we can do is make sure we are prepared to tackle these events with a robust innovation infrastruc­ture supported by highly trained people who can get things done.

Professor Katherine Andrews is an infectious diseases research leader and Director of the Griffith Institute for Drug Discovery at Griffith University.

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