Body & Mind

New malaria vaccine aces clinical trials

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The recommendation comes after a massive pilot program immunizing nearly one million African children
The dark blue spots are the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, attacking human blood cells under a microscope
University of Tübingen
In clinical trials in humans, a new malaria vaccine has been shown to provide long-term protection with effectiveness of up to 100 percent
Paul Mehnert / University of Tübingen
The recommendation comes after a massive pilot program immunizing nearly one million African children
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With mosquitoes being the primary carrier of malaria, the battle against the disease has been fought at every step of the disease's development: from reducing mosquito populations, to preventing them from biting humans, to dealing with the parasites introduced by the insect after infection occurs. A new vaccine that introduces live malaria parasites into the bloodstream has just undergone clinical trials in humans, and has been shown to provide long-term protection with effectiveness of up to 100 percent.

According to the latest figures from the World Health Organization (WHO), 212 million cases of malaria were reported in 2015, resulting in almost 430,000 deaths, and of those cases, 90 percent occur in Sub-Saharan Africa. The main culprit is the Anopheles mosquito, the bite of which transmits parasites like the Plasmodium falciparum, responsible for the majority of malaria infections and deaths.

For years, scientists have fought to control the spread of the disease through a variety of means. We've tried to keep mosquitoes from biting humans by altering their sense of smell and making ourselves less tasty. Other studies have tried to turn the bugs' own immune systems against the parasites, or boost our body's response after infection. The new research, from the University of Tübingen and the biotech company Sanaria Inc., focuses on this latter battlefield.

While there are other promising vaccines in the works, including RTS,S/AS01, which is due to be field tested in 2018, this new technique is the first to inject fully viable, live malaria parasites into the human body. The vaccine was tested in 67 adults with no history of malaria. Administered at different intervals, it was found to work best with three high doses of the treatment, four weeks apart. Everyone in the sub-group tested with this treatment reported 100 percent protection from the disease, and the resistance was still present 10 weeks later. Better yet, no adverse side effects were reported.

"That protection was probably caused by specific T-lymphocytes and antibody responses to the parasites in the liver," says Peter Kremsner, an author of the study.

The dark blue spots are the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, attacking human blood cells under a microscope
University of Tübingen

Malaria symptoms usually take about 15 days to show up after first infection, and that's due to the fact that P. falciparum will first migrate to the liver to reproduce. The parasites are vulnerable during this time, but they're careful not to alert the immune system by not yet making the host sick. Once it's ready, the pathogen leaves the liver and enters the bloodstream, where it continues to spread.

The new vaccine skips the incubation period in the liver by introducing the fully developed pathogen into the bloodstream, kickstarting the immune system to fight back. To prevent the disease from actually taking hold, the researchers added chloroquine – a commonly-used treatment for malaria – to the mix.

"By vaccinating with a live, fully active pathogen, it seems clear that we were able to set off a very strong immune response," says Benjamin Mordmüller, lead researcher on the study. "Additionally, all the data we have so far indicate that what we have here is relatively stable, long-lasting protection."

With the success of the clinical trial, the researchers plan to test how effective the vaccine is over the course of several years.

The research was published in the journal Nature.

Source: University of Tübingen

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3 comments
Nik
Seem a wonderful breakthrough, but will malaria be able to mutate, and become a new threat?
Kpar
Nik, that is always a possibility, but that possibility is there whether we find/use a vaccine or not. This is very promising- the biggest breakthrough since DDT.
BobLoblaw
That's just great. Lets not clean up the standing water and hand out mosquito nets and do things to eradicate malaria. Instead lets just perpetually spend money on a vaccine. The MMR vaccine "aced" clinical trials too, and according the lawsuit filed by two Merck virologists, it's because they committed fraud which they witnessed first hand. Finally, vaccines induce the body to produce antibodies. They do NOT confer cellular immunity. This is why it's not uncommon for vaccinated individuals to catch, and spread the same virus they have antibodies to, to other vaccinated people. This means you could have 100% vaccination rates, and everyone could still catch and spread the illness. So "herd immunity" is a fallacy. Herd "resistance" might be a legitimate thing, but the theory of "herd immunity" is pseudoscience.