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Malaria vaccine offer to reinvigorate the fight against the disease

Opinion & Analysis
THE World Health Organisation has announced a historic move: It has recommended the widespread use of the first ever malaria vaccine.

Eunice Anyango Owino THE World Health Organisation has announced a historic move: It has recommended the widespread use of the first ever malaria vaccine. The recommendation is based on the results of an ongoing pilot programme in Malawi, Ghana and Kenya. Malaria is a huge global health challenge, around 409 000 people died of malaria in 2019 alone. The WHO African region carries significant proportion of the malaria burden — 94% of all malaria cases and deaths occurred in the region. Children younger than five are the most vulnerable.

It has taken 30 years. Why so long?

The most significant reason is that the malaria parasite is very complex. It has different stages; some in the mosquito and others in the human. Thus, scientists had to pursue diverse approaches.

For example, in the human there are two stages. These are:

Pre-erythrocytic stages (sporozoite, or spore-like, stage).

This is the period when the parasite’s sporozoite from a mosquito bite enters the blood stream and heads for the liver to mature and multiply after which they are then released.

The blood stage (Merozoite stage). This is when the parasite’s merozoites are released from the liver, and multiply in the red blood cells.

So an effective vaccine against the first stage (pre-erythrocyte stage) would be one that elicits an immune response that would either prevent infection of the liver cells or lead to destruction of the infected liver cells.

An effective vaccine for the second stage (blood stage) would be the one that does one of three things: Elicits immune responses that prevent infection of red blood cells; decreases the number of parasites in the blood; reduces the severity of the disease by allowing body to develop a natural immunity with little risk of getting ill.

Another option was to develop transmission blocking vaccines.

An effective transmission blocking vaccine induces antibodies that block maturation of malaria parasites in mosquitoes that feed on vaccinated individuals.

A factor that contributed to a delay in the production of the vaccine is that scientists working on malaria vaccines in the early stages lacked an understanding of the specific immune responses associated with protection against the parasite.

Also, malaria parasites — such as Plasmodium falciparum — display a variety of antigens on their surfaces that help them escape the immune system and also render vaccines based on specific antigens less effective.

More about the vaccine?

The vaccine RTS’s, trade name Mosquirx, is given in four doses to children between the ages of 5 months and 17 months; the first 3 doses are given monthly with the first at five months and the third at nine months.

The fourth, which is a booster dose, is given at between 15 and 18 months.

The efficacy is about 40% against ordinary malaria cases and 30% against severe malaria.

No two vaccines or diseases are comparable.

WHO has set an efficacy level of 50% and above for most vaccines and most highly efficacious vaccines offer 75% and above level of protection. For example, the COVID-19 vaccines based on messenger (m)RNA technology by Pfizer and Moderna offer well above 90% protection level.

The RTS’s vaccine targets the parasites before they infect liver cells; it targets the circumsprorozoite protein on P.falciparum sporozoites surface and is thus considered a pre-erythrocytic vaccine.

What are the next steps?

WHO and the manufacturers of the vaccine GlaxoSmithKline will be rallying countries, particularly those with high malaria burdens, to adopt the vaccine as part of their national malaria control strategies.

They will also be asking these countries to set aside funds.

They will also be involved in fundraising from the global health community or work with partners, for a broader roll-out of the vaccine.

There should be equitable and long-term access to the vaccine. The vaccine should also be cost effective.

The hope is that WHO announcement will re-energise the race to find even more efficient vaccines against malaria.

Current reports by the Jenner Institute of Oxford University suggest that a malaria vaccine that might meet the WHO goal of 75% is under trial in Burkina Faso.

What does this mean for malaria control in Africa?

The vaccine is an additional tool to the malaria control toolkit.

The vaccine does not provide complete protection. And will be introduced as part of a toolkit geared to reduce malaria infections and fatalities. Other measures include bed nets and indoor residual spraying.

Nevertheless the vaccine has a great potential to reduce death and illness in high burden areas in sub-Saharan Africa especially if used in combination with pre-existing malaria prevention methods.

For example a study by the London School of Tropical Medicine reported a 70% reduction in hospitalisation and deaths in children given the Mosquirx vaccine plus antimalarial drugs.

Malaria control had been stagnating in some African countries, with countries like Sudan and Eritrea seeing a significant resurgence in the recent past.

The vaccine will reinvigorate the fight against malaria.

And it offers the promise of bringing it back on track.

Eunice Anyango Owino is a medical entomologist at the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Nairobi