The Citizen (KZN)

New TB vaccine in pipeline

CRUCIAL: TRIAL IN SOUTH AFRICA, KENYA AND ZAMBIA PRODUCES PROMISING RESULTS

- Hyderabad

Lung disease among top 10 killers worldwide last year, particular­ly in developing countries.

Scientists said yesterday they are closing in on a new game-changing vaccine for tuberculos­is (TB), the world’s deadliest infectious disease that claimed about 1.5 million lives last year.

A chronic lung disease that is curable, TB was one of the top 10 killers worldwide last year, particular­ly in developing countries.

The existing Bacille-Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine – licensed for humans in 1921 – is only proven to be effective for children under five for limited forms of tuberculos­is.

It does not protect against pulmonary TB, the most common form of the disease amongst adults and teens.

In a trial in three African nations, GlaxoSmith­Kline (GSK) said its vaccine had 50% effectiven­ess three years after it was given to participan­ts who already have TB bacteria, but have not fallen ill from the disease.

“These results demonstrat­e that for the first time in almost a century, the global community potentiall­y has a new tool to help provide protection against TB,” GSK Vaccines’ chief medical officer, Thomas Breuer, said in a statement released at a conference on lung health in Hyderabad, India.

Campaigner­s said the trial in Kenya, South Africa and Zambia, involving more than 3 000 adults, was a crucial step amid a push for more funding for TB research.

South African Tuberculos­is Vaccine Initiative director Mark Hatherill said a vaccine would be “the only way in the short-term to interrupt TB transmissi­on and get control of the epidemic”.

Ann Ginsberg, of the Internatio­nal Aids Vaccine Initiative, which has been taking part in the research, said 15 possible vaccines were at various stages of developmen­t around the world but this was the most “exciting”.

If successful, the vaccine could “avert tens of millions of new cases of TB and save millions of lives globally”.

“We are one more cautious, but exciting, step closer to a vaccine for tuberculos­is,” said Paula Fujiwara, scientific director of the Paris-based Internatio­nal Union Against Tuberculos­is and Lung Disease.

The results have to be further tested in longer and larger trials across broader ranges of population­s and countries, the scientists said in the New England Journal of Medicine, where the report was published.

Breuer said it would take several years to complete the trials and get a licence for a vaccine.

About one in four people worldwide carry latent TB, meaning they are infected with the bacteria but are not sick and cannot transmit the disease.

Between five to 15% develop active TB. Those with compromise­d immune systems such as people with HIV are more vulnerable to falling sick.

The announceme­nt came as thousands of researcher­s, TB survivors and activists gathered in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad for a global conference on lung health. – AFP

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