WHO recommends second malaria vaccine for children
A child receives a shot during the launch of the extension of the world’s first malaria vaccine (RTS, S) pilot program for children at risk of malaria illness and death within Kenya’s lake-endemic region at Kimogoi Dispensary in Gisambai on March 7, 2023. The pilot program coordinated by the World Health Organization (WHO) has provided malaria vaccines in three countries, Ghana, Malawi and Kenya, since 2019. More than 1.2 million children under five years old have received at least one dose of the four-dose vaccine in Africa. According to the WHO, the vaccine has been estimated to save one child’s life for every 200 children vaccinated. Around 90 percent of the world's malaria cases are recorded in Africa, where 260,000 children die from the disease each year. (Photo by YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP)
(AFP) - The UN's health agency on Monday recommended a second malaria vaccine for children, which could save hundreds of thousands of lives by plugging a huge supply and demand gap.
Nearly half a million children in the African region die every year from the disease, which is caused by a parasite carried by mosquitoes.
"As a malaria researcher, I used to dream of the day we would have a safe and effective vaccine against malaria. Now we have two," said World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
The new R21/Matrix-M vaccine, developed by Britain's Oxford University and manufactured by the Serum Institute of India, has already been approved for use in Burkina Faso, Ghana and Nigeria.
In 2021, the RTS,S vaccine, produced by British pharmaceutical giant GSK, became the first to be recommended by the WHO to prevent malaria in children in areas with moderate to high malaria transmission.
"Demand for the RTS,S vaccine far exceeds supply, so this second vaccine is a vital additional tool to protect more children faster, and to bring us closer to our vision of a malaria-free future," Tedros said.
- Deadly disease -
Almost half the world's population lives in a malaria high-risk area, with the vast majority of cases and deaths occurring in Africa.
The WHO's regional director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, said the new vaccine held great potential for the continent by helping to close the huge demand-and-supply gap.
"Delivered to scale and rolled out widely, the two vaccines can help bolster malaria prevention and control efforts and save hundreds of thousands of young lives in Africa from this deadly disease," she said.
Pilot programmes to introduce the RTS,S vaccine in three countries -- Ghana, Kenya and Malawi -- have enabled 1.7 million children to receive at least one dose since 2019.
These programmes have led to a substantial reduction in severe and fatal forms of malaria, and a drop in child mortality.
At least 28 African countries plan to introduce a WHO-recommended malaria vaccine as part of their national immunisation programmes, the WHO said.
It added that the RTS,S vaccine will be introduced in some African countries in early 2024, and the R21 vaccine is expected to be available in mid-2024.
The two vaccines have similar efficacy rates of around 75 percent when administered under the same conditions.
The cost-effectiveness of the new vaccine would be comparable to other childhood vaccines, with a dose of R21/Matrix-M costing between $2 and $4, the WHO said.
The organisation and its partners expect requests for up to 60 million doses a year by 2026, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance said in a statement.
This figure is expected to rise to up to 100 million doses by 2030.
-Dengue, meningitis, Covid-
Beyond malaria, the WHO recommended a new dengue vaccine, Qdenga, for six to 16 year olds in areas where the disease is a major public health problem.
Its experts also recommended a new meningitis vaccine, Men5CV, which protects against five species of disease-causing bacteria.
The health agency also said that in the fight against Covid-19, a single dose of most vaccines is now sufficient for primary immunisation against the disease, given that most people have already been infected at least once.
© Agence France-Presse