The British drugmaker said the shot, called RTS,S, is
intended exclusively for use outside the European Union but will
be evaluated by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) in
collaboration with the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Malaria, a mosquito-borne parasitic disease, kills more than
600,000 people a year, mainly babies in the poorest parts of
sub-Saharan Africa.
Experts have long hoped that scientists would be able to develop
an effective vaccine against the disease, and scientists at GSK
have been working on this one for 30 years.
Yet hopes that RTS,S would be the final answer to wiping out
malaria were dampened when results from a final-stage trial in
babies aged six to 12 weeks showed the shot provided only modest
protection, reducing episodes of the disease by 30 percent
compared to immunization with a control vaccine.
GSK said data from that and other final phase III trials -
conducted at 13 African research centers across Burkina Faso,
Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, and Tanzania -
have also been included to support the application.
"An effective vaccine for use alongside other measures such as
bed nets and anti-malarial medicines would represent an advance
in malaria control," the company said in a statement.
The WHO has previously indicated it may recommend use of RTS,S
from as early as 2015 if EMA drugs regulators back its license
application.
GSK has been developing RTS,S with the non-profit PATH Malaria
Vaccine Initiative (MVI), with grant funding from the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation to MVI.
If approved, the vaccine is unlikely to be anything other than
neutral for GSK's bottom line. The firm has promised it will be
priced at cost of manufacture plus a 5 percent margin, and the
margin would be reinvested in research on malaria and other
neglected tropical diseases.
"This is a key moment in GSK’s 30-year journey to develop RTS,S
and brings us a step closer to making available the world's
first vaccine that can help protect children in Africa from
malaria," Sophie Biernaux, head of GSK's malaria vaccine
franchise said in the statement.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; editing by Jason Neely and Pravin
Char)
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