Sanaria's Malaria Vaccine Yields Unprecedented Protection In Clinical Trial

Pharmaceutical Investing

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded the current trial with additional support from Sanaria. Sanaria has also receives research support and funding from multiple other institutions in the United States, Europe, and Africa, most of which participate in the International PfSPZ Consortium and will continue its …

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded the current trial with additional support from Sanaria. Sanaria has also receives research support and funding from multiple other institutions in the United States, Europe, and Africa, most of which participate in the International PfSPZ Consortium and will continue its fund-raising efforts to expand its research and clinical programs.
“Scientists have struggled for more than three decades to produce an effective malaria vaccine that provides durable protection against infection with malaria parasites. These results show that we are on the road to having a safe, successful, highly effective vaccine that has the potential to save millions of lives,” said Dr. Marcel Tanner, President, Swiss Academy of Sciences and past director of the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute.
Dr. Adel Mahmoud, a Princeton professor, former president of Merck Vaccines, and Sanaria board member, concluded, “The goal is a safe, well-tolerated, easily, administered, highly protective vaccine against malaria. As the clinical trials unfold, we are learning that PfSPZ Vaccine can meet all of these criteria.”
Multi-Phase Trials
In the clinical trial reported in Nature Medicine entitled, Protection against malaria at 1 year and immune correlates following PfSPZ vaccination, volunteers received intravenous inoculations of Sanaria® PfSPZ Vaccine, which consists of live, weakened, purified malaria parasites that do not cause illness. At 21 weeks after last immunization, 9 of 14 volunteers (55%) were protected against exposure to the bite of malaria parasite-infected (disease transmitting) mosquitoes. Five of the 9 volunteers protected at 21 weeks underwent repeat exposure to malaria parasite-infected mosquitoes at 59 weeks and all five (100%) were protected against infection. The trial included 101 adult volunteers, ages 21-45, who were divided into groups with 57 participants receiving the vaccine at varying doses to evaluate alternative dosage regimens. The vaccine was well tolerated and safe. Vaccine efficacy among volunteers was tested at 3 weeks, 21–25 weeks, and 59 weeks after the final vaccination. Participants were enrolled, vaccinated and assessed under the direction of Robert Seder, M.D. at the Vaccine Research Center, NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, MD, and Kirsten Lyke, M.D. at the Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland Baltimore School of Medicine.
Future clinical trials of PfSPZ Vaccine in Africa, the U.S., and Europe are expected to lead to licensure of an affordable vaccine for use in mass vaccine administration campaigns in countries most affected by malaria and to prevent malaria in travelers. According to the World Health Organization, African children are hardest hit, and the disease primarily strikes in 17 African nations, with people in Democratic Republic of Congo and Nigeria most often stricken.
Salim Abdullah, Chief Executive Director of Tanzania’s Ifakara Health Institute, the site of two trials of PfSPZ Vaccine, including the first trial in infants, and the principal investigator of the first trial of PfSPZ Vaccine in Equatorial Guinea said, “We had always anticipated short term protective immunity to be induced by PfSPZ Vaccine. These data on more than a year of sterile protection opens the door to vaccine effectiveness beyond our previous expectations. My colleagues and I continue to be very excited about working with Sanaria.”
In addition to the benefit to residents of Africa and other parts of the world with malaria, the vaccine will be used to prevent malaria in tourists, diplomats, business travelers, aid workers, industrial workers, and military personnel.
About Malaria
Taken from the WHO webpage:
There were about 214 million cases of malaria in 2015 and an estimated 438,000 deaths. Most deaths occur among children living in Africa where a child dies every minute from malaria. Country-level burden estimates available for 2015 show that an estimated 78% of malaria deaths occur in just 15 countries. Together, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Nigeria account for over 40% of the estimated total of malaria deaths globally.
About Sanaria Inc.:
Sanaria Inc. is a socially focused, for-profit company founded in 2003. The Company’s mission is to develop and commercialize whole-parasite malaria vaccines that confer high-level, long-lasting protection against malaria. Sanaria’s corporate headquarters, administrative, research, development, and manufacturing operations are located in Rockville, Maryland. The Company’s website is sanaria.com.
Except for historical information, this news release contains certain forward-looking statements that involve known and unknown risk and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the statements made. Such statements include the availability of an effective vaccine, the expectations for conquering malaria, beliefs concerning the suitability of a successful vaccine, and the establishment of a path toward prevention of infection. These forward-looking statements are further qualified by important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. These factors include, without limitation, the Company’s ability to raise sufficient funds, the regulatory approval process, dependence on third parties, clinical trials results, the Company’s patent portfolio, ability to commercialize the vaccine, dependence on key personnel and other risks associated with vaccine development.
For more information contact Alexander Hoffman (press@sanaria.com)
To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sanarias-malaria-vaccine-yields-unprecedented-protection-in-clinical-trial-300264994.html
SOURCE Sanaria Inc.

Related Links

https://sanaria.com

The Conversation (0)
×