VALIDATE Workshop: Vaccines for Neglected Tropical Skin Diseases – Progress and Challenges

Attendance at this workshop is by invitation only.

Vaccines for Neglected Tropical Skin Diseases – Current Progress and Barriers

About the Workshop

Neglected tropical skin diseases - including VALIDATE pathogens Leishmaniasis, Buruli ulcer, Leprosy, and cutaneous Tuberculosis - pose significant global health challenges. These diseases often share common immunological mechanisms and urgently require innovative vaccine solutions.

This three-day closed workshop (for approximately 30 delegates) will bring together leading experts from research, industry, and funding bodies to:

  • Share the latest developments in vaccine discovery for VALIDATE’s skin NTDs
  • Identify key barriers to progress
  • Explore collaborative solutions for advancing vaccine research

 

The workshop will feature sessions on four key areas:

  • Pathogenesis & mechanisms of protection
  • Vaccine development & clinical progress
  • Laboratory & animal models
  • Social aspects, including patient perspectives

Each session will feature talks, followed by round-table discussions, ensuring all delegates contribute to shaping future research and policy directions.

 

Workshop Aims

  • Highlight current knowledge – showcase the latest research on pathogenesis, immunology, and vaccine development for VALIDATE’s skin NTDs
  • Identify key challenges – examine barriers to vaccine research and implementation, including funding gaps, knowledge limitations, and public engagement hurdles
  • Foster collaboration & find solutions – strengthen networks and interdisciplinary partnerships to accelerate breakthroughs in skin NTD vaccine research

Agenda

Expand All

0845 – 0900  Registration & Coffee

0900 – 0905  Welcome from Dr Maria Adelaida Gomez

 

Session 1: Introductions

 

0905 – 1020  Turbo Talks

All Delegates

 

 

1020 – 1050  Break

 

1050 – 1120  The Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Spectrum and Challenges for Vaccine Development

Prof Maria Adelaida Gomez, CIDEIM, Colombia

 

 

1120 – 1150  Overview of Buruli Ulcer Disease

Dr Yaw Ampem Amoako, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) & Kumasi Centre for Collaborative Research in Tropical Medicine (KCCR), Ghana

 

 

1150 – 1200  Q&A / Panel

1200 – 1300  Lunch

 

1300 – 1330  Leprosy: What Do We Know About Mycobacterium leprae?

Dr Hua Wang, University of Strathclyde, UK

 

 

1330 – 1400  Brief Overview of TB with a Focus on Cutaneous Forms

Prof Rajko Reljic, St George's University of London (SGUL), UK

 

 

1400 – 1410  Q&A / Panel

 

1410 – 1440  Break

 

Session 2: Funders & Organisation Perspectives

 

1440 – 1500  Advancements in Point-of-Care Molecular Diagnostics and Vaccine Strategies for Leprosy Diagnosis and Control

Dr Sundeep Vedithi, University of Cambridge, UK

 

 

1500 – 1520  Wellcome's Strategic Approach to Infectious Disease Challenges

Miss Jeanette Hayes, Wellcome Trust, UK

 

 

1520 – 1540  UK Science & Technology Network in Colombia

Mr Luis Calzadilla, British Embassy, Colombia

 

 

1540 – 1600  Integrated Control and Management of Skin NTDs and Priority Research Gaps

Dr Daniel Argaw Dagne, World Health Organization (WHO), Switzerland

 

 

1600 – 1620  Q&A / Panel

1620 – 1655  Round-table Discussions

1655 – 1700  Wrap-Up

0845 – 0900  Registration & Coffee

0900 – 0905  Welcome from Dr Maria Adelaida Gomez

 

0845 – 0900  Coffee

 

Session 3: Pathogenesis – Mechanisms of Protection, Pathology, Virulence Factors

 

0900 – 0930  Immunopathogenesis in Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

Dr Fernanda Novais, Ohio State University, USA

 

 

0930 – 1000  Inhibition of Sec61 by Mycolactone – A Virulence Mechanism with Major Impacts on Cellular Physiology

Prof Rachel Simmonds, University of Surrey, UK

 

 

1000 – 1010  Q&A / Panel

1010 – 1040  Break

 

1040 – 1110  Leprosy: History, Pathogenesis, and Treatment

Dr Márcia Rodrigues Jardim, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Brazil

 

 

1110 – 1140  Unmasking Human Tuberculosis: Insights into Granuloma Biology and Disease Pathogenesis

Prof Adrie Steyn, AHRI & University of Alabama, South Africa & USA

 

 

1140 – 1150  Q&A / Panel

1150 – 1230  Round-table Discussions

1230 – 1330  Lunch

Session 4: Latest Vaccine Progress in the Field

 

1330 – 1400  A Composite Subunit Vaccine Confers Full Protection Against Buruli Ulcer in the Mouse Model

Prof Rajko Reljic, St George's University of London (SGUL), UK

 

 

1400 – 1430  Attenuated Parasites as a Road for Vaccine Development Against CL – Roadblocks and Advancements

Dr Camila de Oliveira, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Brazil

 

 

1430 – 1500  Advancing Leprosy Vaccines Through Human Immunology: Challenges and New Directions

Dr Veronica Schmitz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Brazil

 

 

1500 – 1515  Q&A / Panel

1515 – 1545  Break

1545 – 1645  Round-table Discussions

1645 – 1700  Wrap-Up

0845 – 0900  Coffee

Session 5: Lab & Animal Models to Study Local Immune Responses and Delivery Systems

 

0900 – 0930  Buruli Ulcer Vaccine Animal Models: Past, Present and Future Challenges

Prof Steve Muhi, University of Melbourne, Australia

 

 

0930 – 1000  Basic and Translational Research for Leprosy: A Long Road to Prevention, Diagnosis, and Therapeutics

Prof Manabu Ato, National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID), Japan

 

 

1000 – 1030  Spatial & Single Cell Transcriptomics: Decoding Skin Resident Immunity from Melanoma to Mycobacteria

Dr Andres Vallejo, University of Southampton, UK

 

 

1030 – 1045  Q&A / Panel

1045 – 1115  Break

1115 – 1200  Round-table Discussions

1200 – 1300  Lunch

Session 6: Social Aspects – Patient Perspectives and Societal Impact

1300 – 1320  Integrating the Vaccine Sciences within Social, Economic, and Policy Perspectives

Prof Maria Elena Botazzi, Baylor College of Medicine, USA

 

 

1320 – 1340  The Social Challenges of Clinical Research in Skin NTDs in Remote Rural Areas

Mrs Alexandra Cossio, CIDEIM, Colombia

 

 

1340 – 1400  Patient Involvement in Leishmaniasis Product Development: The Role of Qualitative and Mixed Methods

Dr Maria del Mar Castro, University of Heidelberg / CIDEIM

 

 

1400 – 1415  Q&A / Panel

1415 – 1445  Break

 

1445 – 1505  Empowering Communities in Leprosy Control: Lessons from Post-Exposure Prophylaxis

Dr Krishna Lama

 

 

1505 – 1525  Bridging the Gap: From Intervention to Impact Through Implementation Research and Social Innovation

Mrs Maria I Echavarria, CIDEIM, Colombia

 

 

1525 – 1535  Q&A / Panel

1535 – 1635  Round-table Discussions

1635 – 1650  Wrap-Up