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Vaccine Innovator Bharat Biotech has announced that its next-generation typhoid vaccine, Typbar-TCV, has demonstrated its safety and efficacy in a high-risk human challenge clinical study carried out at Oxford University. What is very significant is the clinical studies produced 87% effectiveness as per the trial results published in Lancet.
The study is the first to demonstrate that immunization with Typbar-TCV is safe, well tolerated and will have a significant impact on disease incidence in typhoid endemic areas that introduce the vaccine. This study was conducted in 112 adult volunteers and used a Âcontrolled human infection modelÂ.
According to the study published in Lancet vaccine is safe, 100% immunogenic, and prevents up to 87% of infections, when using real-life definitions of typhoid fever. Efficacy data from this trial will help to fill a long existing knowledge gap regarding Vi-conjugate vaccines.
This data is highly significant since the currently available vi-ps typhoid vaccines cannot be administered to children below 2 years, and do not confer long-term immunity. Typbar-TCV® can be administered to children below 2 years of age and does confer long-term immunity. Protection over a longer term reduces the need for repeat vaccinations.
Typhoid is caused by the bacterium Salmonella Typhi, and is responsible for around 20 million new infections and 200,000 deaths each year, mainly in South and South East Asia and Africa. Although typhoid as a disease is amenable to antibiotics treatment, increasing frequencies of multi-drug resistance among the invasive isolates is posing a serious threat and limiting the effectiveness of such treatments.
According to Dr. Krishna Ella, Chairman & Managing Director the Company is pleased that the vaccine has been found to be extremely effective in the first ever high-risk human challenge studies. ÂThe results of this study and the 87% effectiveness success endorse more than 10 years of R&D efforts to develop this vaccine and various clinical trials that have been carried out over the past 8 yearsÂ, he said.
ÂMultidrug-resistant Salmonella typhi has become a major public health problem, as more people are prescribed antibiotics for even common fever in developing nations, Dr. Ella said while citing the example of drug resistance against typhoid fever found in Hyderabad city in Pakistan.
“We are proud being world-first to pursue a high-risk human challenge study and be successful. This paves way for an early realization of an effective vaccine that can help reduce the typhoid fever disease burden faced by millions of families,ÂÂ he added.
The trial led by Prof. Andrew Pollard, Director, Oxford Vaccine Group, was designed based on human infection models where many of the participants, mostly University students, were to consume a drink containing bacteria.The results of the trial clearly show that the new Typhoid Conjugate vaccine gives significantly superior performance compared to the Typhoid Vi polysaccharide vaccine.
It is unconscionable that children are still dying by the thousands every year from diseases like typhoid that are completely preventable,” said Anita Zaidi, director of the Enteric and Diarrheal Diseases team at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “The prevention and control of typhoid should be a global health priority and we are pleased to support the Typhoid Vaccine Acceleration Consortium as part of our overall strategy to combat typhoid through an integrated approach including access to clean water, improved sanitation, and immunization.”
The Typbar TCV conjugated to tetanus toxoid vaccine human challenge study holds great promise particularly in of south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa which have a high burden of typhoid fever including the incidence of multidrug resistance challenge that cities like Hyderabad in Pakistan and Bangladesh are aiming to tackle currently. Bharat Biotech is working with the Consortium in carrying out field trials in different countries to evaluate the efficacy of TypbarTCV®.
The Product Summary File has been submitted to World Health Organisation for prequalification. WHO prequalification would allow for UNICEF to procure this vaccine for low-income countries where the disease burden is very high.
TypbarTCV is currently licensed in India, Nigeria, and Nepal, with registrations underway in Malaysia, Turkey, Thailand, Uganda, Kenya, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam, and 30 other countries.
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