• DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Dengue
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
      • Our story: 20 years of DNDi
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
  • DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Dengue
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
      • Our story: 20 years of DNDi
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
Home > Press releases

Bayer and DNDi sign first agreement to develop an innovative oral treatment for human river blindness

Berlin, Germany / Geneva, Switzerland — 9 Dec 2014

Bayer HealthCare and the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) have signed an agreement under which Bayer will provide the active ingredient emodepside to support DNDi in its effort to develop a new oral drug to treat river blindness (or onchocerciasis). The world’s second leading infectious cause of blindness, river blindness is a neglected tropical disease caused by a filarial worm.
[Deutsch]

Emodepside originates from the Japanese pharmaceutical company Astellas and has been developed by Bayer HealthCare’s Animal Health division for veterinary use. The compound has been found to be effective in killing adult worms in pre-clinical studies, thus showing potential as a new ‘macrofilaricidal’ drug for the treatment of patients with river blindness. Astellas has granted Bayer the rights to develop emodepside along these lines.

Large-scale programmes for the treatment and control of filarial diseases, such as river blindness, have been in place for over twenty years, based on administering drugs to entire populations. While these mass drug administration (MDA) programmes have seen considerable successes, treatments must be repeated at regular intervals of every 6 or 12 months for up to 17 years to cover the life span of adult worms. This is primarily due to the fact that currently used treatments  are ‘microfilaricidal’, which means that they kill only the young worms. A macrofilaricide such as emodepside, by killing adult worms, could dramatically reduce treatment time of MDAs and could be used in areas and circumstances where the use of microfilaricidal drugs is limited.

‘We need to build on the experience and progress of the past twenty years and give new impetus to research and development for new health tools to accelerate the elimination of river blindness in targeted countries of Africa’, explains Dr Bernard Pécoul, Executive Director of DNDi. ‘Through our collaboration with Bayer on the development of emodepside, we hope to bring a new, safe, short-course, field-adapted treatment to patients and  offer a new public health approach for countries long affected by this disease.’

‘The provision of drugs for treating neglected tropical diseases like Chagas disease and African sleeping sickness has been an essential component of our social engagement for many years now’, says Dr Olivier Brandicourt, Chairman of the Board of Management of Bayer HealthCare. ‘We are looking forward to joining DNDi in its mission to develop better and adapted treatments for patients with neglected diseases.’

Within the framework of the agreement, DNDi will be responsible for the preclinical and clinical development of emodepside and Bayer for the pharmaceutical development, manufacturing, registration and supply of the drug. The agreement ensures that emodepside, if successful in subsequent phases of drug development, would be available at the lowest sustainable price to ensure affordability and access in the current 31 African disease-endemic countries.

The rights to use technology or data generated within the collaboration allow each party to pursue the project with third partners in case of withdrawal of the other party, thus securing the development and accessibility of emodepside for the benefit of patients.

***

More about the project and filarial diseases

  • Video on filarial diseases
  • Filaria in Ghana – Slideshow
  • DNDi’s work on filarial diseases
  • Emodepside project

 
About river blindness (onchocerciasis)

Onchocerciasis, also known as river blindness, is endemic in 36 countries in Africa, the Arabian Peninsula and the Americas. It affects over 25 million worldwide, over 6 million of which suffer debilitating symptoms and some 270,000 afflicted with blindness. The disease hinders economic development in areas where it occurs. Fear of infection through the bite of the blackfly vector leads to abandonment of fertile riverside areas where it abounds. The adult parasitic worm can live for up to 15 years in the human body. The female adults produce millions of microfilariae that trigger serious visual impairment (including blindness), lesions, and intense itching and depigmentation of the skin. Female blackflies ingest microfilariae if they bite an infected person. Some of the microfilariae may transform into infective larvae and may be injected into another person through the same blackfly, where the parasites complete their life cycle.

Potential advantages of a macrofilaricidal drug for river blindness

  • Could reduce duration of treatment which, with current treatments, is based on mass drug administration (MDA) rounds that can last up to 17 years.
  • Could be used in areas where the use of microfilaricidal drugs is limited due to safety concerns in areas where patients with river blindness are co-infected with Loa loa (African eye worm) and have very high levels of microfilariae in the blood. Treatment of these patients with current drugs can cause serious adverse reactions – possibly due to the sudden, massive death of the juvenile Loa worms – including brain damage (encephalopathy), which can be fatal.
  • Could be used in individual patient treatment (case management).

About emodepside
Originating from the Japanese pharmaceutical company Astellas, the compound has been developed by Bayer Animal Health for animal health uses and commercialized as an anthelmintic veterinary drug for cats and dogs in combination with praziquantel (Profender™) and in combination with toltrazuril (Procox™). Following its successful animal use, the compound has been found in relevant animal models of the human diseases to be effective in killing the adult worm in pre-clinical studies, a unique feature permitting to envisage a shorter therapeutic intervention to treat infected patients.

About Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi)
The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) is a not-for-profit research and development (R&D) organization working to deliver new treatments for the most neglected diseases, in particular sleeping sickness (human African trypanosomiasis), Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, filaria, and paediatric HIV/AIDS. Since its inception in 2003, DNDi has delivered six new treatments: two fixed-dose antimalarials (ASAQ and ASMQ); nifurtimox-eflornithine combination therapy (NECT) for late-stage sleeping sickness; sodium stibogluconate and paromomycin (SSG&PM) combination therapy for visceral leishmaniasis in Africa; a set of combination therapies for visceral leishmaniasis in Asia; and a paediatric dosage form of benznidazole for Chagas disease. www.dndi.org

About Bayer HealthCare
The Bayer Group is a global enterprise with core competencies in the fields of health care, agriculture and high-tech materials. Bayer HealthCare, a subgroup of Bayer AG with annual sales of EUR 18.9 billion (2013), is one of the world’s leading, innovative companies in the healthcare and medical products industry and is based in Leverkusen, Germany. The company combines the global activities of the Animal Health, Consumer Care, Medical Care and Pharmaceuticals divisions. Bayer HealthCare’s aim is to discover, develop, manufacture and market products that will improve human and animal health worldwide. Bayer HealthCare has a global workforce of 56,000 employees (Dec 31, 2013) and is represented in more than 100 countries. www.healthcare.bayer.com.

Press contacts
DNDi Press officer (Headquarters)
Violaine Dallenbach
vdallenbach@dndi.org
Tel: +41 22 906 92 47 / Mobile: +41 79 424 14 74

DNDi Press officer (Germany)
Lena Langbein
llangbein@dndi.org
Mobile: +49-151 581 47 57 8

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals
Corporate Communications & Public Affairs
Eva Bretschneider
evachristine.bretschneider@bayer.com
Tel. +49 30 468 15625 / Mobile: +49 151 14704196

Partnership Filaria: river blindness

Read, watch, share

Loading...
Statements
8 May 2025

DNDi’s briefing note for 78th World Health Assembly

Marco Krieger
News
30 Apr 2025

Message on the passing of Dr Marco Aurélio Krieger, Vice-President of Production and Innovation in Health, Fiocruz

Screening activities in village in Guinea
News
25 Apr 2025

Statements from Dr Luis Pizarro and Daisuke Imoto about the Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize awarded to DNDi

Two man outside of a hospital talking with a nurse
Press releases
24 Apr 2025

Liverpool clinical trial aims to advance life-changing treatment for a deadly parasitic disease

Woman walking in a laboratory
Press releases
23 Apr 2025

DNDi welcomes GHIT support for new project with three Japanese universities to find drug candidates for Chagas disease

Stories
16 Apr 2025

Drug discovery explained: Chagas – How to prove treatments work?

Statements
16 Apr 2025

Statement from the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) on the conclusion of WHO Pandemic Agreement negotiations

Press releases
15 Apr 2025

New treatment for cryptococcal meningitis enters Phase II trial as global HIV funding cuts threaten to cause a massive increase in advanced HIV disease

VIEW ALL

Help neglected patients

To date, we have delivered thirteen new treatments, saving millions of lives.

Our goal is to deliver 25 new treatments in our first 25 years. You can help us get there. 

GIVE NOW
Linkedin-in Instagram Twitter Facebook-f Youtube
International non-profit developing safe, effective, and affordable treatments for the most neglected patients.

Learn more

  • Diseases
  • Neglected tropical diseases
  • R&D portfolio
  • Policy advocacy

Get in touch

  • Our offices
  • Contact us
  • Integrity Line

Support us

  • Donate
  • Subscribe to eNews

Work with us

  • Join research networks
  • Jobs
  • RFPs
  • Terms of Use   
  •   Acceptable Use Policy   
  •   Privacy Policy   
  •   Cookie Policy   
  •   Our policies   

  • Except for images, films and trademarks which are subject to DNDi’s Terms of Use, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Switzerland License