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R&D News Roundup: April 29, 2024

 

Top News in R&D

Massive amounts of H5N1 vaccine would be needed if there’s a bird flu pandemic. Can we make enough?
STAT (4/24), features the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations

As reports of H5N1 bird flu circulating in dairy cow herds across the United States continue, the experts in charge of preparing and responding to pandemics are now considering our ability to quickly develop a vaccine if human transmission were to occur in the future. The world has decades of experience producing, regulating, and updating flu vaccines, as well as the recent memory of the incredibly rapid development of vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, current global production capacity for flu vaccines would not yield enough doses quickly enough to vaccinate the large portion of the world’s population that would be necessary to quell a bird flu pandemic. Adjuvants—compounds that boosts immune response to the active vaccine antigen —or introduction of an mRNA vaccine could, respectively, stretch supplies and speed up production, but it is not clear that there is sufficient production capacity for relevant adjuvants, and it is unclear how close producers are to advancing mRNA flu vaccines to market. Additionally, current flu production capacity is highly concentrated in high-income countries with no flu production in Africa, underlining the potential of another highly inequitable pandemic response.

Medicines for Malaria Venture and Novartis announce positive efficacy and safety data for a novel treatment for babies <5 kg with malaria
MMV press release (4/24)

Last week Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) and Novartis announced positive data from their Phase 2/3 trial in Africa demonstrating the efficacy and safety of a novel formulation of the Coartem® malaria medicine developed for babies weighing less than 5 kilograms. Previously, this population lacked access to an evidence-based treatment option developed specifically for them, with this trial becoming the first evidence-based trial conducted to evaluate a new antimalarial dose and regimen for all infants under 5 kilograms with acute uncomplicated malaria. This population is currently treated with tablets meant for higher-weight children that are simply adjusted for weight, which can lead to overdose and toxicity in smaller kids. The data have been submitted for regulatory review, and if approved, the partners aim to make the treatment available as soon as possible.

Promising patient-friendly oral drug against visceral leishmaniasis enters Phase II clinical trial in Ethiopia
The National Tribune (4/23), features DNDi

The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) and partners have initiated a Phase 2 clinical trial in Ethiopia testing an innovative, safer, simpler, and patient-friendly medicine to treat visceral leishmaniasis, the world’s deadliest parasitic killer after malaria. Visceral leishmaniasis is currently treated with painful injections that must be given at the hospital daily for 17 days and can cause rare but life-threatening side effects. The hope is that the new drug, which is administered via oral pills, will be efficacious, less toxic, and more accessible than the currently available treatment regimen, ensuring earlier access to treatment. A similar Phase 2 trial is also being conducted in South Asia to test if patients in the two endemic regions respond differently to the treatment.

 

 

News from GHTC

Big shots: Five vaccines in development to watch in 2024
GHTC's Breakthroughs Blog (4/24)

GARDP to present positive phase 3 trial results for zoliflodacin at ESCMID Global 2024
Global Antibiotic Research & Development Partnership (GARDP) press release (4/24)

Replenishing the National Slide Reference Bank in Zambia
Jhpiego blog post (4/24)

World Malaria Day 2024: Quiz on malaria innovations
GHTC's Breakthroughs Blog (4/23)

 

 

Highlights From the Week

Injectable antibody drug protects children from malaria in Mali trial
Science (4/26)

DRC is seeing its worst mpox outbreak — but has no vaccines or treatments yet. Why?
NPR (4/26)

Why the fight against malaria is having a ‘Red Queen’ moment
The Telegraph (4/25)

West Africa's Benin, Liberia and Sierra Leone launch malaria vaccination
Reuters (4/25)

How Rwanda is fighting malaria in a lab
Devex (4/25)

In precedent-setting move towards drug-development cost transparency, MSF reveals cost of its landmark TB clinical trial: €34 million
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) press release (4/25)

Researchers lead community engagement meeting on HIV vaccine discovery
ChimpReports (4/24)

MSU team creates a promising vaccine candidate for antibiotic-resistant bacteria
NewsMedical (4/24)

Opinion: This may be our last chance to halt bird flu in humans, and we are blowing it
The New York Times (4/24)

NIH RADx tech development program diversifies, proliferates post-pandemic
360Dx (4/24)

FDA gives Emergency Use Authorization to Wondfo Biotech point-of-care COVID, flu assay
360Dx (4/24)

Congo Republic declares mpox epidemic
Reuters (4/24)

WHO redefines airborne transmission: what does that mean for future pandemics?
Nature (4/24)

New antibiotics aren’t being fully used, study finds
CIDRAP (4/23)

Pfizer vs Moderna battle over COVID vaccine patents begins in UK
Reuters (4/23)

H5N1 bird flu virus particles found in pasteurized milk but FDA says commercial milk supply appears safe
STAT (4/23)

Chronic hepatitis B immunotherapeutic vaccine given approval to begin trials
ContagionLive (4/22)

Forced to eat bat feces, chimps could spread deadly viruses to humans
Science (4/22)

Opinion: Epistemic disobedience–Undoing coloniality in global health research
PLOS Global Public Health (4/22)

Opinion: Why the silence on the shortfall in malaria vaccine doses?
Devex (4/22)

Next pandemic likely to be caused by flu virus, scientists warn
The Guardian (4/20)

 

 

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