CIRD76100 - VRR: specified diseases: tuberculosis and malaria
FA02/SCH13/PARA4
Tuberculosis (TB)
TB is an infection caused by mycobacterium tuberculosis, spread
through airborne droplets in the breath of an infected person. It
is thought that about one-third of the world’s population
carries the TB infection, but in only 5% of normal cases does the
disease develop, and then only after many years. Even so, this
results in about 8 million sufferers becoming ill each year, and 2
million of them dying from it, almost all in developing countries.
In those suffering from chronic illnesses, malnutrition or AIDS,
the proportion of those developing the disease is much higher.
Immunisation with the long established BCG vaccine is highly
effective in children, but less so in adults. Treatment of the
advanced disease is difficult, involving a regime of three or more
drugs taken over many months or years, and often the disease is
resistant to existing drugs.
Qualifying R&D may relate either to vaccine or to drugs,
and for either prevention (prophylactic) or treatment
(therapeutic).
Malaria
Malaria is an infection by the blood parasite plasmodium, which
is spread from one infected human (or animal) to another by the
bite of the Anopheles mosquito. It results in at least 1 million
deaths per annum directly, and perhaps another 2 million
indirectly; 70% of the sufferers are in sub-Saharan Africa.
Chemoprophylactics exist, but have unpleasant side effects
and are of limited value to the populations of countries where
malaria is endemic. No vaccine currently exists. The classical
treatments based on quinine are becoming ineffective as resistant
strains emerge.
Qualifying R&D activity may include vaccine or medicines,
prophylactic or therapeutic. Research into new or improved
preventative medicines will qualify even if the principal
beneficiaries are travellers to non-infected areas.
