R21

R21 anti-malaria vaccine is a game changer: scientist who helped design it reflects on 30 years of research, and what it promises

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 四月 25, 2024

Until three years ago nobody had developed a vaccine against any parasitic disease. Now there are two against malaria: the RTS,S and the R21 vaccines. Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford and chief investigator for the R21 vaccine, tells Nadine Dreyer why he thinks this is a great era for malaria control.What makes malaria such a difficult disease to beat?Our hominoid predecessors were being infected by malaria parasites tens of millions of years ago, so these parasites had a lot of practice at clever tricks to escape immune systems long before we came along.

Key Points: 


Until three years ago nobody had developed a vaccine against any parasitic disease. Now there are two against malaria: the RTS,S and the R21 vaccines. Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford and chief investigator for the R21 vaccine, tells Nadine Dreyer why he thinks this is a great era for malaria control.

What makes malaria such a difficult disease to beat?

  • Our hominoid predecessors were being infected by malaria parasites tens of millions of years ago, so these parasites had a lot of practice at clever tricks to escape immune systems long before we came along.
  • Additionally, the malaria parasite goes through four life cycle stages.
  • Medical researchers have been trying to make malaria vaccines for over 100 years.

How does the R21/Matrix-M vaccine work?

  • An antigen is any substance that causes the body to make an immune response against that substance.
  • We targeted the sporozoites, which is the form that the mosquito inoculates into your skin.
  • Read more:
    Two new malaria vaccines are being rolled out across Africa: how they work and what they promise

A child dies every minute from malaria in Africa. Why are children more susceptible than adults?

  • The age you’re most likely to die of malaria in Africa is when you are one year old.
  • For the first six months you are protected largely by your mother’s immunity and the antibodies she transfers during pregnancy.
  • Without malaria, children would be healthier in general — the disease makes you susceptible to other infections.

What about the pace of vaccine rollouts?

  • We’ve been disappointed that it’s taken more than six months to roll out the R21 vaccine since it was approved in October last year.
  • Compare that to a COVID-19 vaccine from Oxford and AstraZeneca that was approved on New Year’s Eve 2020 and rolled out in several countries the very next week.

How big a role will vaccines have in the fight to eradicate malaria?

  • Nobody is quite sure how many of the older tools such as insecticides and bed nets we need to carry on with.
  • Anti-malaria medication only lasts for days and parasites are building up resistance against these drugs as well.
  • There are about 40 million children born every year in malaria areas in Africa who would benefit from a vaccine.
  • The Serum Institute of India, our manufacturing and commercial partner, can produce hundreds of millions of doses each year.


Adrian Hill receives funding from government and charitable funders of malaria vaccine development. He has received funding awarded to the University of Oxford from the Serum Institute of India to support clinical trials of the R21/Matrix-M vaccine. He may benefit for a share of any royalty stream to Oxford University from the vaccine.

Two new malaria vaccines are being rolled out across Africa: how they work and what they promise

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 四月 23, 2024

Malaria incidents are on the rise. There were 249 million cases of this parasitic disease in 2022, five million more than in 2021. Africa suffers more than any other region from malaria, with 94% of cases and 95% of deaths worldwide. This year two revolutionary malaria vaccines are being rolled out across the continent. Nadine Dreyer asks Jaishree Raman if 2024 will be the year the continent takes a significant leap towards beating the disease.The RTS,S malaria vaccineThe long-awaited vaccine was described as a breakthrough for science, child health and malaria control.

Key Points: 


Malaria incidents are on the rise. There were 249 million cases of this parasitic disease in 2022, five million more than in 2021. Africa suffers more than any other region from malaria, with 94% of cases and 95% of deaths worldwide. This year two revolutionary malaria vaccines are being rolled out across the continent. Nadine Dreyer asks Jaishree Raman if 2024 will be the year the continent takes a significant leap towards beating the disease.

The RTS,S malaria vaccine

  • The long-awaited vaccine was described as a breakthrough for science, child health and malaria control.
  • It is being aimed at children under the age of 5, who make up about 80% of all malaria deaths in Africa.
  • Among children aged 5 and 17 months who received 4 doses of RTS,S, the vaccine prevented about 30% of them from developing severe malaria.
  • Since 2019 more than 2 million children in Ghana, Kenya and Malawi have been vaccinated with the RTS,S malaria vaccine.

R21/Matrix M

  • The R21 vaccine is a significant improvement on the RTS,S vaccine, with 75% efficacy over a year.
  • The R21/Matrix M vaccine is very cost-effective, projected to retail at $2-$4 a dose, comparable in price to other childhood vaccines used in Africa.
  • These very encouraging findings prompted several malaria-endemic African countries, including Ghana and Nigeria, to approve use of the R21/Matrix M vaccine well before the World Health Organization.
  • The WHO finally approved and prequalified R21/Matrix M for use in the last quarter of 2023.

No silver bullet

  • While the fight against malaria has been significantly bolstered by the availability of these vaccines, they are not the silver bullets that are going to get us to an Africa free of malaria.
  • This will be the year that many vulnerable young African children will have access to not one, but two malaria vaccines.


Jaishree Raman receives funding from the Global Fund, the Gates Foundation, the South Africa Research Trust, the South African Medical Research Council, the National Research Foundation, and the National Institute for Communicable Diseases. She is affiliated with the Wits Research Institute for Malaria, University of Witwatersrand, and the Institute for Sustainable Malaria Control, the University of Pretoria.

The effect of new housing supply in structural models: a forecasting performance evaluation

Retrieved on: 
星期日, 二月 4, 2024
BET, Section 2, Model, XT, CIT, LTV, Forecasting, Total, Bank, RT, Elasticity, GDP, Website, University of Chicago Press, Process control block, Fiscal, Reproduction, University, WTP, Johns Hopkins University Press, E32, Faculty, Writing, KMR, Monetary economics, Household, Root mean square, YT, GFC, Language, VAR, A6, Motivation, Growth, PLT, Hartman–Grobman theorem, Research, House, Observation, Friction, Section 4, Classification, Macroeconomic model, BAA, AP, Kálmán, Odyssean Wicca, Parameter, Blue chip, A5, HPT, Mark Gertler, Learning, Smets, Inflation, ECB, Q2, Trade, CE, Hit, SPF, Review of Economic Dynamics, ZBW, Kolasa, LTM, R21, Patient, Prior, Shock, Movement, ZT, Australasian, M1, Lens, Great, Nobuhiro, European Central Bank, Estimator, Policy, LTI, COVID-19, Attention, HP, Feedback, Goethe University Frankfurt, International Journal of Forecasting, Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Bank, Behavior, Health, Blue Chip Economic Indicators, Inverse, Zero lower bound, The Blue, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Economic forecasting, Matrix, Economy, Federal, R31, LTP, Chinese Blackjack, WTI, CES, Sim, Bit, Section 5, Capital market, Quantitative Economics, Credit, Motion, Central bank, Journal of Political Economy, Political economy, Taylor & Francis, Journal of Monetary Economics, Act, Binning, CPT, DPT, Point, MCMC, RealTime, Literature, Metropolis–Hastings algorithm, ZLB, TFP, Research Papers in Economics, Del Negro, GBT, Communication, Kalman filter, Markov, Cycle, Business cycle, Eurozone, DFF, PDF, Filter, Medical classification, American Economic Journal, Demand shock, Comparison, Employment, KTEH, Cobb–Douglas production function, Nonprofit organization, Sampler, PTW, Par, Liquidity trap, Paper, Nominal interest rate, QT, Exercise, Monetary policy, RTD, Interest rate, A7, University of Cambridge, Control, Statistics, Posterior, Pressure, American Economic Review, E37, Financial intermediary, Social science, Basel II, Delphic, Depreciation, European Economic Review, HPD, Ai, Calendar, E17, Government, Journal of Econometrics, HTM, Freedom, LTE, Probability, Face, Calibration, Oxford University Press, New Keynesian economics, Sun, HH, Me, Uncertainty, FPI, Production, Dynamics, Handbook, Real estate

Key Points: 

    The long road to a new malaria vaccine, told by the scientists behind the breakthrough – podcast

    Retrieved on: 
    星期二, 十月 3, 2023

    In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we find out why it’s been so hard to find a malaria vaccine – and hear from the scientists behind the new breakthrough.

    Key Points: 
    • In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we find out why it’s been so hard to find a malaria vaccine – and hear from the scientists behind the new breakthrough.
    • In 2021, 619,000 people died from malaria, the majority of them children.
    • The search for a vaccine has been underway for decades, but it’s particularly difficult due to the complexity of the malaria parasite.
    • “It begins with a mosquito bite,” says Faith Osier, co-director of the Institute of Infection at Imperial College London.

    Locally transmitted malaria in the US could be a harbinger of rising disease risk in a warming climate – 5 questions answered

    Retrieved on: 
    星期五, 六月 30, 2023

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on June 26, 2023, that five cases of locally transmitted malaria had been identified – four in Florida and one in Texas – since May 2023.

    Key Points: 
    • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on June 26, 2023, that five cases of locally transmitted malaria had been identified – four in Florida and one in Texas – since May 2023.
    • These are the first cases of locally acquired mosquito-borne malaria in the U.S. since 2003.

    1. What is malaria and how did these people become infected?

      • Malaria is a serious and sometimes life-threatening disease caused by the bite of a female mosquito from the genus Anopheles, the vector that transmits malaria.
      • The most common symptoms are fever, chills, headaches, muscle aches and fatigue.
      • These symptoms typically occur from 10 to 15 days after people are infected with the parasite.

    2. Why might these cases be surfacing now?

      • For one, climate change is causing a shift in weather patterns, some of which can worsen malaria conditions.
      • A higher average surface temperature from global warming could lead to higher mosquito migration in areas that were previously uninhabitable by Anopheles mosquitoes.
      • Given these changes in local conditions, more cases could occur in populations that were previously “immunologically naïve” to malaria.
      • This drives up the number of drug-resistant cases, the severity of the illness and the possibility of larger outbreaks.

    3. How can people help prevent malaria transmission?

      • Precautions also include what’s known as “drain and cover” – in other words, draining standing water to prevent mosquitoes from multiplying and using screens to prevent mosquitoes from entering through doors and windows.
      • Health departments also note that it’s important to drain or discard containers that can collect rainwater, such as flower pots, old tires and buckets.

    4. What are the available malaria treatments?

      • There are several medicines used to prevent and treat malaria.
      • The choice of medication typically depends on the type of malaria, whether a malaria parasite is resistant to a medicine, the weight or age of the person infected with malaria and whether the person is pregnant.
      • These kill malaria parasites by damaging their proteins and are usually the most effective treatment against malaria.

    5. Are vaccines against malaria available?

      • Therefore, in October 2021, the World Health Organization began recommending the widespread use of a malaria vaccine known as RTS,S/ASOI for children who live in moderate- to high-risk areas.
      • Trials show that the vaccine can significantly reduce malaria, including severe malaria, among young children.
      • While new malaria vaccines will be a major boost for curbing malaria worldwide, it will be critical for health departments to continue emphasizing other preventive strategies, especially in newly affected areas like Florida and Texas.

    Hevolution Foundation Advancing Geroscience Efforts (HF-AGE) Grant Recipients Announced

    Retrieved on: 
    星期一, 五月 22, 2023

    Hevolution Foundation , a global non-profit organization that provides grants and early-stage investments to incentivize research and entrepreneurship in healthspan science, announces the recipients of its grants program, Hevolution Foundation Advancing Geroscience Efforts (HF-AGE).

    Key Points: 
    • Hevolution Foundation , a global non-profit organization that provides grants and early-stage investments to incentivize research and entrepreneurship in healthspan science, announces the recipients of its grants program, Hevolution Foundation Advancing Geroscience Efforts (HF-AGE).
    • First announced in October 2022 , the program funds research that was deemed meritorious and praiseworthy by the National Institute on Aging ( NIA ), one of the institutes of the US National Institutes of Health (NIH).
    • “HF-AGE was inspired by my time with the NIA, where I saw so many superb grant proposals that were taken through the review process but ultimately not funded, oftentimes simply for lack of resources,” commented Felipe Sierra, PhD, Chief Scientific Officer of Hevolution Foundation.
    • HF-AGE is an independent initiative of Hevolution Foundation, which is not affiliated with the NIH, the NIA, or the US government.

    Nigeria has Africa's highest malaria death rate - progress is being made, but it's not enough

    Retrieved on: 
    星期一, 四月 24, 2023

    In 2021, for instance, around 247 million cases of malaria were reported and about 619,000 people died.

    Key Points: 
    • In 2021, for instance, around 247 million cases of malaria were reported and about 619,000 people died.
    • He’s also the former technical director to the National Malaria Elimination Programme in Nigeria.
    • The existence of malaria anywhere is an interaction between the environment and the organism responsible for the disease.
    • When you look at an environment, you’re looking at natural factors such as the temperature and humidity.
    • In terms of humidity, Nigeria has a vegetation that favours the reproductive stages of the parasite in the mosquito which serves as a vector.
    • It’s only the Mambilla Plateau, in Taraba State, northeastern Nigeria, that’s considered relatively malaria free in Nigeria.
    • The Nigerian National Agency for Food and Drug Administration And Control recently approved the R21 malaria vaccine for use.
    • Let the manufacturers take over distribution using their own market principles in a manner that will be affordable to many people.
    • We need to look at new initiatives and also position ourselves in the vaccine game with respect to malaria.

    Hope is on the horizon for a malaria-free Africa

    Retrieved on: 
    星期一, 四月 24, 2023

    The progress made between 2000 and 2015 is proof of what can be achieved.

    Key Points: 
    • The progress made between 2000 and 2015 is proof of what can be achieved.
    • Support from global donors helped drive down malaria deaths among children under five from 723,000 to 306,000.
    • Fifty-five of the 106 malaria-endemic countries showed a 75% decrease in new malaria cases by 2015 compared to 2000.
    • Malaria cases and deaths increased as national malaria control programmes competed with other health challenges.
    • The World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners issued urgent calls to address the challenges national programmes were facing.

    History

      • One of the goals was to reduce the malaria burden by 75% by 2015.
      • Encouraged by the progress in rolling back malaria, the WHO launched the Global Technical Strategy for Malaria.
      • Unfortunately, the release of this strategy coincided with a levelling off in domestic and international funding, which led to an uptick in malaria cases.

    Setbacks

      • Climate change experts predict that as the Earth warms up, malaria will spread into malaria-free areas.
      • And that malaria transmission rates in areas where the disease is currently will increase.
      • It has mutated and can go undetected by the most widely used point-of-care diagnostic tool in rural malaria endemic regions.
      • Read more:
        Some malaria parasites are evading detection tests, causing an urgent threat to public health

    Way ahead

      • A newer version of the RTS,S vaccine, the R21 vaccine produced by Oxford University’s Jenner Institute, has shown much high efficacy in a Phase III trial.
      • This has prompted Ghana and Nigeria to approve its use this month without pre-approval from the WHO.

    Bespoke High-Performance Bridgestone Tires Unleash the New Lamborghini Revuelto's Potential

    Retrieved on: 
    星期四, 三月 30, 2023

    Bridgestone developed bespoke Potenza Sport high-performance tires for the Lamborghini Revuelto, which features three electric motors powering the front wheels, and a V12 internal combustion engine powering the rear wheels.

    Key Points: 
    • Bridgestone developed bespoke Potenza Sport high-performance tires for the Lamborghini Revuelto, which features three electric motors powering the front wheels, and a V12 internal combustion engine powering the rear wheels.
    • Available in 20, 21 and 22 inches, Bridgestone Potenza Sport tires were designed to enhance the Lamborghini Revuelto's sporty and high-performance capabilities.
    • The Bridgestone Potenza Sport tires specifically developed for the Lamborghini Revuelto are also available with Run Flat Technology (RFT).
    • Steven De Bock, Vice President Consumer Replacement and OE at Bridgestone EMIA, commented: "Bridgestone has developed bespoke tires for Lamborghini that perfectly complements and enhances the Revuelto's character.