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R&D News Roundup: May 28, 2024

 

Top News in R&D

A promising approach to develop a birth control pill for men
Science Daily (5/23)

In a new study, researchers from the Baylor College of Medicine and partner institutions found that a novel, nonhormonal sperm-specific approach showed promise in mice as a reversible male contraception option. The researchers identified a small molecule that would inhibit a key protein, STK33, required for fertility in both mice and human males and generated modified versions of STK33 inhibitors to make them more stable, potent, and selective, eventually testing the most effective compound they generated in mice. The researchers hope to further evaluate the inhibitor and similar compounds to determine effectiveness as a potential contraception option. There has been research into a variety of different strategies for male contraception, but there are currently no approved options for men beyond male condoms.

GMO mosquitoes released in Djibouti to fight malaria
BBC (5/22)

Tens of thousands of genetically modified mosquitoes have been released in Djibouti to stop the spread of Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes that transmit malaria as part of the pilot phase of a partnership between Oxitec, the government of Djibouti, and Association Mutualis. The modified mosquitoes carry a gene that kills female offspring, the only mosquitoes that bite and transmit malaria, before they can reach maturity. If successful, the modified mosquitoes will be tested in larger field trials, and operational deployment will continue through next year, hopefully boosting malaria control efforts. This partnership is the first time that modified mosquitoes have been released in East Africa and the second time on the African continent, although similar technology has been successfully used in Brazil, the Cayman Islands, Panama, and India, with more than one million modified mosquitoes released around the world since 2019.

HHS advances plan to produce 4.8 million H5N1 vaccine doses
CIDRAP (5/22)

The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the US Department of Health and Human Services is moving forward with a plan to produce 4.8 million doses of H5N1 avian flu vaccine, as the current outbreak's second human case in the United States was identified this week. The two vaccine candidates are currently in bulk form, with one of the two candidate vaccine viruses reportedly well-matched to the currently circulating strain. Health officials have identified a manufacturing line at one of its manufacturing partners for fill-and-finish, which will take a couple of months to complete. Agency officials are also coordinating with mRNA vaccine makers Pfizer and Moderna about their potential involvement in vaccine development. There are additional ongoing interagency discussions about what would trigger vaccine deployment, including a change in transmission propensity, like human-to-human or animal-to-human spread; any sign of increased illness severity; a change in the complexion of the cases, like a human infection with no tie to the affected dairy farms; or the identification of a mutation in the virus.

 

 

News from GHTC

Opinion: Neglected tropical diseases threaten to become the next pandemic. We must prepare for them now
Salon (5/23), written by Research!America President & CEO Mary Woolley

University of Oxford pandemic computer simulations to guide future vaccine trials
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations press release (5/22)

Moderna’s outsized price ask for COVID vaccines in South Africa highlights need to ‘rein in corporates’ in pandemics
Health Policy Watch (5/22), features Public Citizen

Will monoclonal antibodies be a new weapon in the fight against malaria?
IAVI Report blog post (5/21), features the Medicines for Malaria Venture, the Medicines Patent Pool, and the Gates Foundation

TB has reclaimed its place as the world’s biggest infectious killer – but are its days numbered?
The Telegraph (5/20), features the Gates Foundation and TB Alliance

 

 

Highlights From the Week

China conducts animal tests with Ebola-like virus that kills within three days
Independent (5/28)

Pfizer's Paxlovid reward
Axios (5/28)

Could a previously unknown protein movement be key to an HIV vaccine?
The Body (5/23)

Oxford Nanopore eyes TB drug resistance for first in-house-developed diagnostic test
360Dx (5/23)

Promising preclinical findings for mRNA vaccine against global H5N1 avian flu clade
CIDRAP (5/23)

High-dose influenza vaccines outperform standard-dose in preventing hospitalization
CIDRAP (5/23)

BioMérieux, Pfizer, Malawi Ministry of Health collaborate on antimicrobial resistance effort
360Dx (5/23)

International scientists propose additions to dengue virus classification system
CIDRAP (5/23)

HPV vaccine provides real benefits for men, analysis shows
Reuters (5/23)

Report: Mpox infections after two doses of Jynneos rare
CIDRAP (5/23)

Report highlights gaps in access, stewardship plans for promising antimicrobials
CIDRAP (5/23)

Michigan reports a human case of H5N1 bird flu, the nation’s second linked to outbreak in dairy cows
STAT (5/22)

New research flags the urgent need for research and evidence on the impact of climate change on neglected tropical diseases and malaria
World Health Organization news release (5/22)

Australia's first human case of bird flu detected in child travelling back from India
ABC News (5/22)

Move over, wastewater. Store-bought milk could be another way to track the bird flu outbreak in cows
STAT (5/21)

Labcorp unveils first-trimester blood test for detecting preeclampsia risks
Fierce Biotech (5/21)

CARB-X to fund neonatal sepsis vaccine candidate
CIDRAP (5/21)

New tool may help identify infants at high risk for poor RSV outcomes
CIDRAP (5/21)

CDC asks states and cities to keep flu surveillance at peak levels because of bird flu threat
STAT (5/21)

A boost for HIV vaccine research: Studies present comprehensive platform for validating next steps
MedicalXpress (5/21)

Serum Institute deploys first doses of Oxford, Novavax-partnered malaria shot to Africa
Fierce Pharma (5/20)

Companies start work on bird flu vaccines for cows—despite major hurdles
Science (5/20)

 

 

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