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Dublin: 12 °C Sunday 19 May, 2013

Hope for medical breakthrough with ‘effective’ malaria vaccine

Almost a million people are year are killed by malaria – but a new vaccine could cut cases in young children by half, a trial suggests.

Image: James Gathany/AP/Press Association Images

THE QUEST FOR the world’s first malaria vaccine appears to have taken a big step: A study in Africa shows experimental shots cut the risk of disease in young children by half.

The initial results from a final stage of vaccine testing were released Tuesday, and the vaccine’s developers called it a milestone in helping to tame one of the world’s most devastating killers.

However, the vaccine won’t be available for at least three years, as crucial further testing must be completed to see how well it works in infants and how long protection lasts. Then the vaccine must be reviewed by government agencies in Europe and in individual African countries.

“We still have a way to go,” Tsiri Agbenyega, lead researcher for the African study, said in a conference call with reporters.

The early results show the vaccine is only about 50 percent effective, significantly lower than the protection seen in more common vaccines. But some experts said it’s a vast improvement over the current situation, and could still save hundreds of thousands of lives.

Globally, malaria kills nearly a million people annually. More than 90 percent of them live in Africa, and most are young children and pregnant women.

Scientists have been trying for decades to develop a malaria vaccine and the one tested – developed by GlaxoSmithKline – is furthest along. Without a vaccine, efforts have concentrated on malaria drugs and other ways to prevent infection such as mosquito bed netting and insecticides.

The new vaccine targets a malaria parasite found in sub-Saharan Africa. Malaria spreads through mosquitoes, which bite people and flush malaria parasites into the bloodstream. The parasites cause bouts of high fever and can end in fatal organ failure.

The new study – still under way – began in 2009 and involves more than 15,000 children in Burkina Faso, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania. The results focus on about 6,000 children ages 5 to 17 months. A year after three doses, the vaccinated children had about half as many cases of malaria as a group that didn’t get the vaccine.

Although there are an array of vaccines against viruses and bacteria, there has never been an effective vaccine against a parasite, which is a more complicated organism. Adding to the complexity is there are five species of malaria parasites – the new vaccine is designed specifically to protect against the deadliest one, which is common in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Comments (3 Comments)

  • Maybe they didn’t pay them with cash, maybe they paid them by saving the child’s life.

    Reply
  • I can’t swear to the details but I’m sure I read about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation approaching a British based malaria researcher some years ago and donating a huge sum, many millions, to his research on the condition that if anything is found its given away, not sold for proffit. Bill Gates said in an interview how he was shocked at the death rates of malaria, and had a researcher double check them, he found as it was primarily a Third World disease the drug companies had no incentive to do any research into it, there was simply no money in it for them as this research costs billions. Oddly enough, when it became clear that that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation were funding research into malaria around the world, handing out research grants worth tens of millions it became obvious that sooner or later this would pay off and a treatment would be found – and given away, GlaxoSmithKline then announced they suddenly found a malaria vaccine they had lying around, rumour had it for over 20 years. Strange that, some would say they’re selling what they have before someone else gives it away. Gates is no fool, his foundation has spurred the sudden interest into malaria research in recent years and it has helped fund this GSK trial in order to make it cheaper to the Third World… who knows, if it works well maybe he’ll buy GSK and give it away anyway.

    Reply
  • “A study in Africa shows experimental shots cut the risk of disease in young children by half.”

    Of course the researchers paid their parents a handsome sum to use their young children as laboratory rats.

    Reply

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