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Young children and
pregnant women are at particular risk from malaria
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Katie Mantell
8 July 2003
Source: SciDev.Net
An international partnership has announced that it is about to
start the largest malaria vaccine trial carried out in Africa to
date.
The trial, which will start on Monday in Mozambique, will test
the efficacy and safety of the potential vaccine, known as
RTS,S/AS02A, among 2,000 children.
Developed by the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals
(GSK Bios), the vaccine has already been shown to be safe and able
to generate an immune response in adults in Belgium, Kenya, The
Gambia and the United States.
This new trial will investigate whether the vaccine, which
attacks the malaria parasite as it passes through the human liver,
can significantly reduce the prevalence of prevent malaria in
children living in an area where transmission of the disease is
known to be high.
Up to 90 per cent of the population in Mozambique is at risk of
malaria, which causes fever, headaches and flu-like symptoms, and
kills more African children under the age of five than any other
disease.
"Our team is committed to finding ways to prevent malaria," says
Pedro Alonso, of the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, Spain and
scientific director of Mozambique's Centro de Investigaçao em Saude
de Manhiça, which is collaborating in the research. "This trial is
an important contribution to that effort, and brings us that much
closer to the goal of immunising children against malaria."
Worldwide, more than 80 malaria vaccine candidates have been
developed, and 16 have been tested in clinical trials. But a vaccine
for the disease, which kills more than one million people a year,
has so far remained elusive. This is partly because, unlike other
diseases that have been tackled with vaccines, malaria is caused by
a complex parasite, rather than a virus or a bacterium.
"We are excited about the progress this clinical trial represents
for the entire malaria vaccine field," says Melinda Moree, director
of the Malaria Vaccine Initiative, an organisation that aims to
accelerate the development of promising malaria vaccine candidates,
and one of the partners in the trial.
"It will give us critical information about the impact of a
promising candidate vaccine for children and is a good example of
the non-profit and public sectors partnering with industry for the
global public good."
Results from the trial are expected in approximately two years.
© SciDev.Net 2003 |