About CIVICs

The Collaborative Influenza Vaccine Innovation Centers (CIVICs) Program

Colorized EM of Influenza from NIAID Flickr

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), created the Collaborative Influenza Vaccine Innovation Centers (CIVICs) program, a network of research centers and cores that work together in a coordinated, multidisciplinary effort to advance influenza vaccine science. The overarching goals of this program include:

  • Supporting improvements in the immunogenicity and durability of seasonal influenza vaccines
  • Developing innovative influenza vaccine approaches that provide robust, durable, broadly protective mucosal and systemic anti-influenza immunity
  • Conducting iterative vaccine design based on detailed immunologic assessment of influenza vaccine candidates through preclinical animal studies, early phase clinical trials, and healthy volunteer human challenge studies
 

NIAID provided up to approximately $51 million in total first-year funding for the program to support the CIVICs Network over seven years.

A Universal Influenza Vaccine: The Strategic Plan for NIAID

CIVICs was created out of needs identified in the NIAID Universal Influenza Vaccine Strategic Plan published in August 2018. The goal for universal vaccines is to provide long-lasting protection against multiple influenza strains, including those with the potential to cause a pandemic. The effectiveness of seasonal influenza vaccines ranges between 10% and 60%. To limit the public health consequences of both seasonal and pandemic influenza, vaccines that are more broadly and durably protective are needed. In the strategic plan, NIAID stated it will accelerate its efforts for developing a universal influenza vaccine by supporting a consortium of scientists focused on addressing obstacles that have limited progress toward this goal; that consortium is CIVICs.

CIVICs Vaccine Pipeline, Influenza Research, and Resources

CIVICs research explores the biology of influenza viruses to aid in evaluating and identifying potential influenza vaccine candidates to provide broader and longer-lasting protection against seasonal and pandemic viruses. The Network produces protocols, data standards, biological samples, and research data to advance immunology, virology, and vaccinology. Through these efforts, CIVICs and its external collaborators have contributed to over 285 publications across more than 125 preclinical, clinical, and vaccine manufacturing studies. Explore the infographics below to learn more about CIVICs work and contributions to advancing influenza vaccine science.