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Antibody Malaria Treatment Works! - Report


This 2014 photo by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a feeding female mosquito. The species is a known vector for the parasitic disease malaria.
This 2014 photo by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a feeding female mosquito. The species is a known vector for the parasitic disease malaria.

Scientific research in Africa found a one-dose antibody treatment that protects adults against malaria for at least six months which is the latest approach in the fight against the mosquito-borne disease.

In 2020 only, Malaria killed more than 620,000 people and sickened 241 million, mainly children under the age of 5 in Africa.

The treatment against malaria is authorized now by The World Health Organization for children, although it is about 30% effective and requires four doses.

Instead of depending on the immune system to make enough of those same infection-blockers after vaccination, the new study tested a very different approach giving people a big dose of lab-made malaria-fighting antibodies.

The experimental antibody, developed by researchers at the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was given by IV — difficult to deliver on a large scale. But the encouraging findings bode well for an easier-to-administer shot version from the same scientists that’s in early testing in infants, children and adults.

The U.S. government research was published Monday in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at a medical meeting in Seattle.

The U.S. government research was published Monday in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at a medical meeting in Seattle.

Dr. Kassoum Kayentao of the University of Sciences, Techniques and Technologies in Bamako, Mali who helped lead the study in the villages of Kalifabougou and Torodo says that “the available vaccine doesn't protect enough people.”

Research has also shown that people are bitten by infected mosquitoes on average twice a day in those villages during malaria season.

The antibody works by breaking the life cycle of the parasite, which is spread through mosquito bites. It targets immature parasites before they enter the liver where they can mature and multiply. It was developed from an antibody taken from a volunteer who received a malaria vaccine.

The research involved 330 adults in Mali who got either one of two different antibody doses or a dummy infusion. All were tested for malaria infection every two weeks for 24 weeks. Anyone who got sick was treated.

Infections were detected by blood test in 20 people who got the higher dose, 39 people who got the lower dose and 86 who got the placebo.

The higher dose was 88% effective, compared to the placebo. The lower dose was 75% effective.

Protection might last during the several months of a malaria season. The idea is to someday use it alongside other malaria prevention methods such as malaria pills, mosquito nets and vaccines. Cost is uncertain, but one estimate suggests lab-made antibodies could be given for as little as $5 per child per malaria season.

Dr. Johanna Daily of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York was not involved in the study but he says that Lab-made antibodies are used to treat cancer, autoimmune diseases and COVID-19.

“The good news is now we have another, immune-based therapy to try to control malaria.”

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