World making 'huge mistake' not funding new TB vaccines - Gates
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[April 05, 2023]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - A lack of funding could delay late-stage trials of
the first new vaccine against tuberculosis for more than a century,
warned Bill Gates, whose foundation is backing the development of the
shot.
The Microsoft co-founder turned philanthropist said there were a raft of
promising innovations in the fight against TB, the world’s biggest
infectious disease killer, but that more funding was essential.
"The failure to fund these things… like we can’t go full speed ahead on
these vaccine trials - that’s a huge mistake," he told Reuters in an
interview on Monday.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is the largest funder of the
battle against TB, he said, and the work on the M72/AS01 vaccine,
originally developed by GSK (GSK.L) and the Gates-backed non-profit
Aeras, is now being led by the Bill and Melinda Gates Medical Research
Institute.
Gates said a plan for phase III trials for the vaccine would likely be
announced later this year. But he called on governments and other
philanthropists to step up to help fund the trials, as well as other TB
innovations.
He estimated that the vaccine trial would cost $700-800m to "prove it
out".
"So even though we'll be a big funder of that, we also need partners to
come in and do that with us," he said, adding that vaccine development
has a high risk of failure so needs real commitment from funders.
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Microsoft founder Bill Gates rides an
escalator on Capitol Hill in Washington., U.S., March 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Julia Nikhinson
TB, a bacterial disease that mostly
affects the lungs, is preventable and treatable, but 10 million
people still catch it annually, and 1.6 million people died from TB
in 2021, almost entirely in low and middle-income countries. It has
long been the world's deadliest infectious disease, although it was
briefly overtaken by COVID-19.
Tools to fight TB, like the Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine,
are imperfect, but there is "hopeful" innovation in vaccines like
M72, simpler treatment regimens, and easier to deploy diagnostic
tests, said Gates.
There is also a United Nations high level meeting on TB due in
September, but Gates said he feared it may not happen due to other
global priorities.
"Even if they do it, it won’t get much visibility," he said. "It’s
always challenging when there's so many budget priorities. But the
world has made a huge mistake not investing more in TB."
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby, editing by Ed Osmond)
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