Technopolis Group

Evaluation of the UK Vaccine Network Project 1.0

Publiceringsdatum: 7 oktober 2025 | Språk: EN

The Context

The UK Vaccine Network Project 1.0 was a UK government initiative (2016-2023) established to strengthen global health security by accelerating the development of vaccines and associated technologies to address epidemic threats in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC).

Guided by the UK Vaccine Network (UKVN), a multidisciplinary panel of experts from academia, industry, government and charities, chaired by the Chief Medical Officer to the Department of Health and Social Care, the Project 1.0 received £134 million in Official Development Assistance (ODA) funding. It supported 99 grants spanning early- and late-stage vaccine development, vaccine manufacturing, One Health, and epidemiological research.

The Evaluation

The UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Research, on behalf of the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), commissioned Technopolis and Triple Line Consulting to conduct an independent evaluation of the UKVN Project 1.0. The evaluation was conducted between May 2024 and July 2025.

The theory-based evaluation assessed the processes, outcomes and impacts of the UKVN Project 1.0, as well as identified learnings for future investments into vaccine R&D. It included a literature review, portfolio analysis of funded projects, a survey with project leads and partners, and a programme of interviews with project leads and international experts from academia, industry and funding bodies.

Eighteen case studies were developed to provide detailed accounts of the impacts and insights derived from project participation. Further, a cost-benefit analysis was conducted to estimate the global benefits of the first year of the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine rollout. This vaccine is based on the ChAdOx platform, the development of which was supported by the UKVN Project 1.0.

The Insights

The evaluation found that the UKVN Project 1.0 played a vital role in strengthening global health security – speeding up vaccines and related technology development for 12 priority pathogens. In particular, it advanced several key areas and delivered measurable impact.

One of the key lessons from the UKVN Project 1.0 is that building on established strengths accelerates progress, while maintaining a diverse technology portfolio enhances long-term innovation and resilience. The evaluation also provided specific recommendations to maximise future impact of the UKVN Project 2.0 and other vaccine R&D programmes.

Learn More

Read the Full report, the Case studies and the Appendices. For more information, please contact Peter Varnai.