New Alliance to Build
African Capacity for Malaria Drug and Vaccine Research
Malaria
Clinical Trials Alliance Supported by New $17 Million Gates Foundation Grant
25 April 2006.
ACCRA, Ghana – We would like
to announce today the establishment of a new
initiative, the Malaria Clinical Trials Alliance (MCTA), that will help
conduct clinical trials of new drugs and vaccines to fight malaria, a disease
that kills 2,000 African children every day.
MCTA will provide training
and technical assistance to research centers in nine countries across Africa
(Mozambique, Tanzania, Malawi, Gabon, Nigeria, Ghana, The Gambia, Kenya and
Senegal) and help to leverage the capabilities of the INDEPTH Network to
strengthen global research and development activities targeting malaria. MCTA
is supported by a new US$17 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation.
New malaria drugs and a
vaccine are urgently needed in Africa, where malaria has grown resistant to
the cheapest and most widely-used treatments. As several promising new drugs
and vaccines move through the research pipeline, there is a need to build
African capacity to conduct large-scale clinical trials of these drugs and
vaccines over the next decade.
MCTA will help
ensure
that African trial sites are properly managed; are able to hire and train
staff; and have database, communications and good financial accounting systems
in place. MCTA will also facilitate collaboration among trial sites,
including sharing of data, expertise and best practices.
Professor Fred Binka,
Executive Director of the INDEPTH Network, said: “Important progress is being
made in developing new malaria drugs and vaccines, but there are not enough
research sites in Africa to conduct the trials that are needed. The funding
that we have received from the Gates Foundation, which is one of the most
significant grants to an Africa-based organization involved in the fight
against malaria, will help accelerate research that could save millions of
lives.”
MCTA’s initial focus will be
to work with the Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) and the PATH Malaria
Vaccine Initiative (MVI) to prepare sites for large-scale clinical trials of
malaria drug and vaccine candidates. In the future, this alliance will seek
to partner with other organizations that have candidate products that require
clinical testing.
“Strengthening clinical
trials facilities in Africa is key to achieving the goals of product
development partnerships such as Medicines for Malaria Venture,” said Dr
Christopher Hentschel, President and CEO of MMV. “With nearly 20 drug
development projects in the portfolio, several of which are in phase III, we
are very pleased with the additional support our trial sites will receive from
the Malaria Clinical Trial Alliance.”
Dr Pascoal Mocumbi, the
European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership’s ambassador,
said that “this alliance addresses the fundamental issues from a long-term
perspective to ensure that trial sites in Africa will provide sustainable,
continuous support for, and take the lead in, clinical trials.”
MCTA’s long-term goal is to
increase the number of self-sustaining clinical research centers in Africa
that can support their own research programs linked to local and national
priorities.
The INDEPTH Network was
formally constituted in 2002 with initial core support from the Rockefeller
Foundation, Sida/SAREC, the World Bank and the Wellcome Trust. “This
investment by the Gates Foundation is not only a major milestone for INDEPTH,
making it possible for us to ratchet up our scientific contributions, but is
also true recognition of the efforts of our other funding partners who
continue to show sustained confidence in INDEPTH,” said Prof. Stephen Tollman,
Chair of the INDEPTH Board of Trustees.