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Scientists Create Working Malaria Vaccine

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Xerobull, Oct 18, 2011.

  1. Xerobull

    Xerobull ...and I'm all out of bubblegum

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    Link



    (Reuters) - For Joe Cohen, a GlaxoSmithKline research scientist who has spent 24 years trying to create the world's first malaria vaccine, Tuesday, October 18, 2011 goes down as a fabulous day.

    "There were many ups and downs, and moments over the years when we thought 'Can we do it? Should we continue? Or is it really just too tough?," he told Reuters, as data showing the success of his RTS,S vaccine were unveiled at an international conference on malaria.

    "But today I feel fabulous. This is a dream of any scientist -- to see your life's work actually translated into a medicine ... that can have this great impact on peoples' lives. How lucky am I?"
    Final stage clinical trial data on RTS,S, also known as Mosquirix, showed it halved the risk of African children getting malaria, making it likely to become the world's first successful vaccine against the deadly disease.

    While scientists say it is no "silver bullet" and will not end the mosquito-borne infection on its own, it is being hailed as a crucial weapon in the fight against malaria and one that could speed the path to eventual worldwide eradication.
    Malaria is caused by a parasite carried in the saliva of mosquitoes. It kills more than 780,000 people per year, most of them babies or very young children in Africa.

    Cohen's vaccine goes to work at the point when the parasite enters the human bloodstream after a mosquito bite. By stimulating an immune response, it can prevent the parasite from maturing and multiplying in the liver.
    Without that immune response, the parasite re-enters the bloodstream and infects red blood cells, leading to fever, body aches and, in some cases, death.

    Although Cohen's scientific work has been largely in Belgium, where he runs a GSK laboratory, the final-stage trials of RTS,S were conducted in Africa, where malaria hits hardest.
    With GSK working in partnership with the non-profit PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI), the trials became Africa's largest-ever medical experiment as the vaccine was tested in around 16,000 children across seven countries.

    Cohen said that if all goes to plan, RTS,S could be licensed and rolled out by 2015.

    SOUL SEARCHING

    As he looks back at the vaccine's long, slow development, the bearded 68-year-old molecular biologist laughs at how naive he was when he first agreed to take on the task.
    It was April 1, 1987 when his boss at the drug company, then called Smith, Kline & French, asked him to be head of the malaria vaccine research program, just after an early-stage experimental vaccine and failed a test.

    "Unfortunately, it was not a great success. Only one volunteer out of the several that were vaccinated was actually protected. So, after quite a bit of optimism, there was then quite a bit of soul searching," Cohen said.

    "I did not actually know much about malaria, apart from about the enormous medical burden it represented. But I felt I was taking on an enormous scientific challenge, and that was exciting for a relatively young scientist."

    Having come from academia and post-doctorate studies into what he said were "sometimes esoteric questions" of molecular biology, he was also attracted by the prospect of doing something "very meaningful" in terms of global health.
    Getting on for a quarter of a century later, Cohen said he had "never dreamed it would take this long."

    He was also careful to underline that this was a first step, as well as a world first. GSK, MVI and several other research groups and drug firms are already working on next generation vaccines and on other ways of making malaria shots they hope will better the roughly 50 percent success rate of RTS,S.

    "The work is not over, that is for sure," Cohen said.
     
  2. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

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    what a great breakthrough
     
  3. Shroopy2

    Shroopy2 Member

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  4. Supermac34

    Supermac34 President, Von Wafer Fan Club

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    Isn't malaria one of the deadliest communicable diseases on the planet? Good for this guy and GSK.

    EDIT: Just read that the research was also funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
     
  5. arno_ed

    arno_ed Member

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    The gates foundation funded a lot of Malaria research. A couple of my friends worked on projects funded by the gates foundation.
     
  6. JuanValdez

    JuanValdez Member

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    How do I rep Joe Cohen?
     
  7. justtxyank

    justtxyank Member

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    Give it to me and I'll mail it to him.
     
  8. 3814

    3814 Member

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    Awesome.
     
  9. Yonkers

    Yonkers Member

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    That's great news. Love to hear this stuff versus the crap that makes you lose faith in humanity.
    With that said, what do you guys think about how this compounds the overcrowding issue we have in the world?We're at 7 billion and will hit 10 billion in 90 years. And I'm not even sure if those numbers include how much more people we would have if big diseases like Malaria go the way of polio.
     
  10. A_3PO

    A_3PO Member

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    Back in 1985, I got malaria while in Sierra Leone (West Africa) for a year. It was rough. Didn't realize so many people still died from it. Great breakthrough.
     
  11. Ender120

    Ender120 Member

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    Thanks to global warming, previously uninhabitable frozen wastelands will support large numbers of our population.

    The rest of the world will look like Splashtown, though.

    I hope those 10 billion people know how to swim.
     
  12. tmoney1101

    tmoney1101 Member

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    [​IMG]
     
    1 person likes this.
  13. Ender120

    Ender120 Member

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    To me, that's way more scary than overpopulation.
     
  14. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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    I was just about to post "What the hell is Bill Gates gonna do now?!" Awesome work by everyone involved, and thank you, Mr. Gates, for donating your later years for good causes.
     
  15. da_juice

    da_juice Member

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    That's great, I just hope the people of Africa are intelligent enough to vaccinate their children instead of following in that "vaccines are immoral and dangerous" crap. Malaria's caused enough suffering as it is, I'd hate to see it not become eradicated because of blind superstition and myth.
     
  16. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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  17. Mr. Brightside

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    I'm not buying it. Just another conspiracy to spread autism in Africa. First, the FBI created AIDS and shipped it off to Africa. Now they are just adding insult to injury.
     
  18. Shroopy2

    Shroopy2 Member

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    Forced international One Child laws?

    Oddly the more prosperity people get, the LESS they procreate. Give women decent jobs and a Sex in the City how-to manual and they'll have less babies.

    Counter-intuitively, it might actually help balance out the population issue for the fact that it can get some cultures out the "dark ages" away from the traditions of big families.

    Hopefully.
     
  19. cod

    cod Member

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    GSK a brand you can trust :grin:

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/dec/09/france.health
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...mbling-gay-sex-thief-says-married-father.html
     
  20. Supermac34

    Supermac34 President, Von Wafer Fan Club

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    This. Population growth on earth will eventually slow down quite a bit as more and more countries modernize and gain prosperity. Huge swaths of Europe already don't repopulate at population replacement levels. In fact, immigration is one of the only things keeping some countries' poplulation levels up at all.
     

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