GSK, Novartis pledge funds for diseases that mostly affect the poor
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[June 23, 2022]
By Natalie Grover and Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - GSK and Novartis on
Thursday reinforced commitments to address neglected tropical diseases,
as world leaders and health experts gather in Rwanda to discuss ways to
better combat illnesses affecting more than a billion people, mostly in
impoverished communities.
The intention is to spur a renewed effort to address some 20 diseases
that have been eradicated in the developed world - ranging from leprosy
to rabies - after the work in these areas was knocked off track by the
economic toll of the pandemic.
GSK pledged to spend 1 billion pounds ($1.23 billion) over the next
decade on developing medicines and vaccines to tackle neglected tropical
diseases (NTDs), as well as infectious diseases such as malaria,
tuberculosis and HIV, which disproportionately affect lower-income
countries.
The London-based company, which pioneered the first malaria vaccine, has
carved out and will invest in a specific global health unit that will
not generate a profit for GSK. It has more than 30 drugs and vaccines in
its pipeline for the effort, including products designed to deal with
antimicrobial resistance.
Swiss drugmaker Novartis has vowed to spend $250 million over the next
five years to develop interventions to tackle NTDs and malaria.
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A sign marks Novartis' Institutes for Biomedical Research in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., January 2, 2020. Picture taken
January 2, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Of that, $100 million has been earmarked for Chagas disease,
leishmaniasis, dengue and cryptosporidiosis. The remainder has been set
aside to address malaria, which killed more than half a million people
in 2020, most of them children under the age of five in the poorest
parts of Africa.
"Large medicine donations without sustainable supply nor innovation
investments are ill-suited to the challenge of NTD control," said Dr.
Bernard Pecoul, executive director of Drugs for Neglected Diseases
initiative (DNDi), a non-profit research and development organization.
"With climate change set to increase the burden of NTDs ... and to hit
the most vulnerable hardest," he said, "now is the time to make a real
commitment to research and development for NTDs."
($1 = 0.8153 pound)
(Reporting by Natalie Grover and Jennifer Rigby in London; Editing by
Bill Berkrot)
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