• 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

DNDi Receives $25.7M from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to Develop New Medicines for Neglected Diseases

Geneva, Switzerland — 12 Dec 2007

The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) has received a USD 25.7 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to research and develop new medicines to treat human African trypanosomiasis (HAT), also known as sleeping sickness, and visceral leishmaniasis (VL).

“The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation grant will help DNDi fill critical gaps in the HAT and VL drug development pipelines by supporting our lead optimization drug discovery programs for HAT and VL, which will in turn fuel our drug development projects,” stated Dr. Bernard Pecoul, Executive Director of DNDi. “With the goal of providing better, low-cost treatments, we are intensifying neglected diseases research and are endeavoring to rekindle the hopes of the many people who suffer from these diseases in the poorest regions of the world.”

The grant, to be disbursed to DNDi over five years, will provide critical funding for the research and development of new drug candidates for HAT and VL. DNDi will foster the development of the drug candidates through the preclinical stages and select one lead candidate for each disease to advance into Phase I human clinical trials.
“The pledge of $25.7M highlights the urgent need to accelerate R&D for neglected diseases,” remarked Dr. Shing Chang, Director of Research & Development at DNDi. “This important commitment to HAT and VL drug discovery will serve to encourage research into new, innovative treatment options for these diseases.”
“Far too little R&D is devoted to neglected diseases such as trypanosomiasis and visceral leishmaniasis, which threaten millions of people in the developing world but are virtually unheard of in rich countries,” said Dr. Regina Rabinovich, Director of Infectious Diseases Development at the Gates Foundation. “By helping to close this research gap, DNDi is bringing us closer to the day when the word ‘neglected’ no longer applies to these diseases.”

For more information, please consult www.dndi.org or contact:
Ann-Marie Sevcsik at amsevcsik@dndi.org or +41 (0)79 814 9147.

About the Diseases – HAT and VL

A fatal disease if not treated, HAT threatens more than 50 million people in 36 countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The few drugs currently in existence to treat either Stage 1 or Stage 2 of the disease have a number of serious limitations including severe toxicity, the difficulty of administration, cost, and lost efficacy in several regions. The difficulty of diagnosis, stage determination, and increasing numbers of treatment failures pose additional clinical challenges.

The urgent need for new drugs to treat VL is also deeply compelling. A potentially fatal disease, VL threatens 200 million people in 62 countries and has a fatality rate as high as 100% within 2 years in some developing countries. Of the 500,000 new cases each year, almost all (~90%) arise from recurrent epidemics in poor, rural areas of the Indian subcontinent, Brazil, and Sudan, with approximately 60,000 deaths each year. Therapeutic options for VL are limited as there are significant drawbacks like route of administration, toxicity, or cost.

About DNDi
The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) is an independent, not-for-profit drug development initiative established in 2003 by five publicly-funded research organisations – the Malaysian Ministry of Health, the Kenya Medical Research Institute, the Indian Council of Medical Research, the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation Brazil, and the Institut Pasteur – as well as an international humanitarian organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières. The UNICEF/UNDP/World Bank/WHO’s Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) is a permanent observer. With a current portfolio of 18 projects, DNDi aims to develop new, improved, and field-relevant drugs for neglected diseases, such as malaria, leishmaniasis, human African trypanosomiasis, and Chagas disease that afflict the very poor in developing countries.

DNDi needs an additional EUR 200 million in funding in order to achieve its objectives of building a robust pipeline and delivering six to eight new treatments by 2014. To date, DNDi has secured EUR 74 million from public and private donors, including a significant initial contribution from Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders.

Funding Visceral leishmaniasis

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