The Informer (Monrovia)

Liberia: New Malaria Vaccine Shows Effectiveness in Children

A mother watches over her ill child: Three doses of a malaria vaccine undergoing clinical trials reduce the risk of children aged between five and 17 months from experiencing clinical malaria - by 56 percent - and severe malaria - by 47 percent.(PHOTO ESSAY: New Hope for Ending Malaria Among Children )

Seattle, 18 October 2011: First results from a large-scale Phase III trial of RTS,S, published online on 18 October 2011 in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), show the malaria vaccine candidate to provide young African children with significant protection against clinical and severe malaria with an acceptable safety and tolerability profile.

The results were announced at the Malaria Forum hosted by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in Seattle, Washington.

The trial, conducted at 11 trial sites in seven countries across sub-Saharan Africa, showed that three doses of RTS,S reduced the risk of children experiencing clinical malaria and severe malaria by 56% and 47%, respectively.

This analysis was performed on data from the first 6,000 children aged 5 to 17 months, over a 12-month period following vaccination. Clinical malaria results in high fevers and chills. It can rapidly develop into severe malaria, typified by serious effects on the blood, brain, or kidneys that can prove fatal. These first Phase III results are in line with those from previous Phase II studies.

The widespread coverage of insecticide-treated bed nets (75%) in this study indicated that RTS,S can provide protection in addition to that already offered by existing malaria control interventions.

The trial is ongoing and efficacy and safety results in 6 to 12 week-old infants are expected by the end of 2012. These data will provide an understanding of the efficacy profile of the RTS,S malaria vaccine candidate in this age group, for both clinical and severe malaria.

An analysis of severe malaria episodes so far reported in all 15,460 infants and children enrolled in the trial at 6 weeks to 17 months of age has been performed. This analysis showed 35% efficacy over a follow-up period ranging between 0 and 22 months (average 11.5 months).

The RTS,S malaria vaccine candidate is still under development. Further information about the longer-term protective effects of the vaccine, 30 months after the third dose, should be available by the end of 2014. This will provide evidence for national public health and regulatory authorities, as well as international public health organisations, to evaluate the benefits and risks of RTS,S.

The overall incidence of serious adverse events (SAEs) in this trial was comparable between the RTS,S candidate vaccine (18%) recipients and those receiving a control vaccine (22 %)

Differences in rates of SAEs were observed between the vaccines groups for specific events, such as seizures and meningitis, and were higher in the malaria vaccine group. Seizures were considered to be related to fever and meningitis was considered unlikely to be vaccine-related. These events will continue to be monitored and additional information about the safety profile of the RTS,S malaria vaccine candidate will become available over the next three years.

Tsiri Agbenyega, a principal investigator of the trial and Chair of the Clinical Trials Partnership Committee, said: "The publication of the first results in children aged 5 to 17 months marks an important milestone in the development of RTS,S. These results confirm findings from previous Phase II studies and support ongoing efforts to advance the development of this malaria vaccine candidate. Having worked in malaria research for more than 25 years, I can attest to how difficult making progress against this disease has been. Sadly, many have resigned themselves to malaria being a fact of life in Africa. This need not be the case. Renewed interest in malaria by the international community, and scientific evidence such as that we are reporting today, should bring new hope that malaria can be controlled."

Andrew Witty, CEO, GSK said: "These data bring us to the cusp of having the world's first malaria vaccine, which has the potential to significantly improve the outlook for children living in malaria endemic regions across Africa. The addition of a malaria vaccine to existing control interventions such as bed nets and insecticide spraying could potentially help prevent millions of cases of this debilitating disease. It could also reduce the burden on hospital services, freeing up much needed beds to treat other patients who often live in remote villages, with little or no access to healthcare. Today's results are a testament to the dedication and tenacity of many scientists, led at GSK by Jean Stéphenne and his vaccine team, including Joe Cohen, the co-inventor of RTS,S, in partnership with many others from across the world. Development is however only half the task, but GSK remains committed to further research into malaria and most importantly, to ensuring that this vaccine will reach those who need it."

Christopher Elias, president and CEO of PATH , said: "This trial represents a powerful example of the high-quality science that is moving us toward controlling and someday potentially eliminating malaria. The results made public today are encouraging and certainly something to feel good about, but let's also remember the human dimension. The PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative's mission is to deliver a vaccine to the children of Africa so that instead of carrying near lifeless babies to crowded pediatric wards, mothers will carry their infants past noisy school playgrounds to bustling immunization clinics. Today, we are an important step closer to realizing that vision, and we look forward to continuing our drive, together with our partners, to bring this vaccine home to the children of Africa."

Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, said: "A vaccine is the simplest, most cost-effective way to save lives. These results demonstrate the power of working with partners to create a malaria vaccine that has the potential to protect millions of children from this devastating disease."

The vaccine is being developed in partnership by GSK and the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI), together with prominent African research centers. The partners are all represented on the Clinical Trials Partnership Committee, which is responsible for the conduct of the trial. Major funding for clinical development comes from a grant by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to MVI. An extended team of organisations continues to work on RTS,S, including scientists from across Europe, North America and Africa. Should it be approved by regulatory authorities and recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO), it will be used for African children, who are most at risk from the disease. Successful development of an effective vaccine to be used alongside other measures such as bed nets and anti-malarial medicines would represent a decisive step toward sustained malaria control.

The impact of the RTS,S Phase III trial extends beyond the vaccine being researched. The trial has made a considerable contribution to many of the African communities that host the trial sites through improved healthcare and hospital facilities. Research capacity at many of the research centres has been strengthened through the training of staff, provision of state-of-the-art laboratories, equipment, and construction of new facilities. This enhanced capacity bodes well for the centres to expand further their leadership in developing remedies for malaria and other infectious diseases for years to come.

RTS,S is a scientific name given to this malaria vaccine candidate and represents the composition of this vaccine candidate. RTS,S aims to trigger the immune system to defend against Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasite when it first enters the human host's bloodstream and/or when the parasite infects liver cells. It is designed to prevent the parasite from infecting, maturing and multiplying in the liver, and from re-entering the bloodstream and infecting red blood cells, at which point the affected person would begin to show symptoms of the disease.

The vaccine, based on a protein first identified in the laboratory of Drs Ruth and Victor Nussenzweig at New York University, was invented, developed and manufactured in laboratories at GSK Biologicals' headquarters in Belgium in the late 1980s and initially tested in US volunteers as part of collaboration with the US Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.

In 2001, the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI) entered into partnership with GSK to study the vaccine candidate's ability to protect young children in sub-Saharan Africa. Over time, the partnership expanded to include the 11 African research centres and, in some instances, associated scientific institutions from Europe and the United States.

With more than US$200 million in grant monies from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, MVI contributes financial, scientific, managerial, and field expertise to the development of RTS,S. GSK takes the lead in the clinical development and in the interactions with regulatory agencies and has invested more than $300 million to date and expects to invest another $50-100 million before the completion of the project.


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