[afro-nets] Massive malaria vaccine trial to begin in Africa

Cross posted from: "[health-vn discussion group]" health-vn@cairo.anu.edu.au

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jNHd8uxRpyuFjobVTdZpBWBU0G9QD94C90N00

Massive malaria vaccine trial to begin in Africa
By DONNA BRYSON – 1 day ago

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Researchers trying to create the world's first malaria vaccine are launching a massive medical trial as early as next month involving 16,000 children that could be the largest such trial ever conducted on children in Africa. British-drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline PLC is teaming with the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative, which is an anti-malaria charity funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and clinics and research centers in Africa to develop a malaria vaccine. "This is probably going to be one of the largest studies in infants and in children in Africa," said Joe Cohen, a top vaccine researcher for GlaxoSmithKline.

Malaria, caused by parasites and spread by mosquitoes, kills nearly 1 million people every year, most of them children in Africa. The trial may start as early as next month, and should be well under way by January, said Cohen. The massive vaccine trials will be conducted in Burkina Faso, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania. Dr. Christian Loucq, director of the Malaria Vaccine Initiative, said the project has been working over the past year to upgrade laboratory, computer and other equipment in those countries, train technicians, and even help develop local equivalents of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to ensure the trials are properly monitored.

The Malaria Vaccine Initiative has so far spent $107 million on the project and has not yet calculated how much more it will spend. GlaxoSmithKline has spent $300 million so far, and estimates it will spend up to $100 million more. Researchers working on the trial said in an interview in Johannesburg that much of the groundwork already has been laid in preliminary trials involving 4,000 children conducted since 2003. They said that even if their vaccine does not succeed, the widespread investment needed to conduct the trials means that Africa will be left with better communications, research and other infrastructure that could be used in the search for vaccines against other diseases such as AIDS.

While the researchers were optimistic, it will be several years before they know whether their vaccine candidate is safe and effective enough for wide use. The preliminary trials showed the vaccine was likely to be at least 30 percent effective against mild malaria cases and about 50 percent effective against severe malaria. That may sound low compared to, for example, the injectable polio vaccine that is at least 90 percent effective. But researchers have found it difficult to pin down a vaccine for parasites, and further tests may show the GlaxoSmithKline candidate is more effective, Cohen said.

Dr. Michel Van Herp, an epidemiologist with the aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres, said a vaccine might have to be more effective than the GlaxoSmithKline candidate has been shown to be so far to be worth the effort of putting it in use. But he acknowledged that matching the effectiveness of the polio vaccine has proven difficult, and said a partially effective vaccine "at least will reduce the workload on the health sector."
Medecins Sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders, is not involved in vaccine research, but is at the forefront of treating malaria among the poor in Africa and elsewhere.

The vaccine would have to be used along with preventive measures like mosquito nets and insecticides to save lives. Dr. Eusebio Macete, who is director of the Manhica Research Centre in Mozambique and was involved in some of the early field trials, said stopping any percentage of the disease would be welcomed in areas "where people are dying every day of malaria." "It's a huge, huge burden, this disease," Macete said. "Whatever percentage we can get will be useful in reducing the impact of the disease."

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Vern Weitzel
mailto:vern.weitzel@gmail.com

Driven by the success of the first and second National Summits on Malaria (2004 and 2007) as well as by the urgent imperatives for scaling up malaria prevention and control efforts in Nigeria towards the achievement of the MDGs, Action Family Foundation in collaboration with the Malaria Summit Group (MSG) is hosting the 3rd National Malaria Summit in Nigeria. The theme for the Summit is: “Scaling-up Malaria Prevention and Control in Nigeria: Mobilizing Private Sector-Civil Society Partnerships Towards Meeting the MDGs”. The event takes place on November 26, 2008 by 10.00 AM at the Planet One Events Place, Bank-Anthony Way, via Mobil Filing Station, Maryland in Lagos.

The subthemes include:
1. Community Uptake of ACTs: Result of KAP Survey in Lagos, Nigeria;
2. Community Mobilization for Effective Malaria Control and Prevention;
3. Assessing the Impact of Current Distribution Models of RBM Commodities Including Targeted Subsidy;
4. Capacity Building of CSOs on Community Programme Accountancy.

We anticipate robust attendance including government officials, professional groups, development partners, private sector and civil society executives from across Nigeria and abroad.

According to Pharm. Steve Onya, who serves as the Chairman of the MSG, previous summits provided opportunity for government to identify programme gaps from the perspective of the community service organizations (CSOs) across the country. “Today, however, most Nigerians are still asking the old question, ‘Where are the Roll Back Malaria commodities and impact of reported increased funding for malaria control interventions?’.

The Summit is expected to advocate the development of transparent, evidence-based mechanisms that will help drive RBM programmes and commodities to target communities and households. Local and international resource persons will facilitate the highly interactive sessions.

Dr. Emmanuel Okechukwu
Medical Advisor
Action Family Foundation (www.actionfamilyfound.org)
2B, Adebowale close,
Mende, Maryland
Lagos, Nigeria
Mobile: +234.80347475345
mailto:malariasumitgrp@yahoo.com