Gates gives $40 million to boost access to mRNA vaccines in Africa
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[October 10, 2023]
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will give
$40 million, including to a Belgian biotech company and two leading
African vaccine manufacturers, in a bid to boost access to mRNA vaccines
for protection against various diseases in Africa.
Nivelles-based Quantoom Biosciences will get $20 million to advance work
on its mRNA manufacturing platform, while the Institut Pasteur de Dakar
in Senegal and Biovac in South Africa will get $5 million each to buy
the technology. A further $10 million is available for other vaccine
manufacturers who want to use the platform.
Vaccines made using mRNA revolutionized the world's response to the
COVID-19 pandemic, but access was drastically inequitable. A number of
initiatives have since been set up to tackle this and try to use the new
technology for existing threats that disproportionately affect
lower-income countries, such as malaria and tuberculosis.
The World Health Organization launched its mRNA vaccine technology hub
in Cape Town in April this year. One member, Afrigen Biologics, has
already made Africa’s first-ever mRNA vaccine for COVID-19 in the lab.
But mRNA vaccines remain expensive to produce, particularly at the scale
needed to test and roll out safe and effective vaccines.
Quantoom’s platform, called Ntensify, allows batches of mRNA to be
produced more cheaply and efficiently at scale, a Gates Foundation
spokeswoman told Reuters ahead of an announcement at its 2023 Grand
Challenges Annual Meeting in Dakar on Monday.
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The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation campus is pictured in Seattle,
Washington, U.S. May 5, 2021. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson/File Photo
“(This) is an important and
necessary step towards vaccine self-reliance in the region,” said Dr
Amadou Sall, chief executive of the Institut Pasteur de Dakar.
Ntensify was first developed using Gates’ funding to Quantoom’s
parent company, Univercells, given in 2016.
Afrigen is already using the platform, including for the development
of Rift Valley fever and gonorrhea vaccines. Gates and Afrigen said
it could cut the costs of developing a vaccine by half compared to
traditional mRNA technology.
"The second generation (of mRNA) is to reduce the cost," said Petro
Terblanche, Afrigen's chief executive, on a phone call from Dakar on
Sunday.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby and Wendell Roelf; Editing by
Bernadette Baum)
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