A comprehensive four-year project including over 10,000 patients in clinical and pharmacovigilance studies for diagnosis and treatment of visceral leishmaniasis (VL, also known as kala-azar) in India and Bangladesh was launched by an international consortium formed last month to support control and elimination strategies in both countries, where the concentration of disease burden is among the world’s highest.
The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), together with OneWorld Health (OWH) and the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), will collaborate with the National Control Programmes of India and Bangladesh, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the Bihar State Health Society, and the Indian Council for Medical Research to carry out the consortium’s projects. The projects will generate the data necessary for Indian and Bangladeshi Ministries of Health to select, adopt and implement the best management strategies to support control and elimination of this deadly disease. Kala-azar, which particularly affects women and children in remote areas, is a parasitic disease transmitted by a sandfly. It causes prolonged fever, enlarged spleen and liver, substantial weight loss, and progressive anaemia. Approximately half a million cases worldwide are recorded each year. If left untreated, the disease is fatal.
From case detection and management to implementation of new treatment modalities, including liposomal amphotericin B (AmBisome®) in monotherapy and several combination therapies – with AmBisome®, miltefosine, and paromomycin – the project covers primary and secondary healthcare levels in the public, not-for-profit, and private sectors. Project strategies are tailored to the specific needs of each sector and expand upon the experience and expertise of the consortium members and regional stakeholders.
‘Implementing new kala-azar treatments that have proven successful in clinical trials will give us new options that can improve compliance, reduce costs, and improve efficiency, while reaching patients closer to home’, affirmed Dr Pradeep Das, Director of the Rajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna, India. The treatments piloted in this programme will build upon the efforts India has undertaken to fight kala-azar, particularly in the public sector and at the primary healthcare level. Monitoring and evaluation will be key to ensuring that outcomes match real life conditions. The private sector in India will also be an important focus of the consortium’s project as it represents a large proportion of kala-azar patients in the country.
Bangladesh has begun to introduce miltefosine and has been using AmBisome® with the support of MSF in one of its sub-districts. ‘This project will provide the evidence necessary to choose the most appropriate new treatments for the disease’, said Professor Be-Nazir Ahmed, Director of Disease Control, DGHS of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Bangladesh. Clinical trials in the most endemic region of Mymensingh District, that were undertaken by DNDi, OWH, and TDR, together with the Kala-Azar Elimination Programme and other local partners, provided a first step towards facilitating registration, recommendation, and implementation of the treatments.
‘This consortium, launching the largest-ever implementation study on kala-azar in Asia, is driven by regional and international actors in support of the National Control Programmes of these two highly endemic countries. Top scientists, clinicians, research institutes, and health authorities have created the momentum and conditions necessary to contribute to elimination of kala-azar in the region’, said Dr Bernard Pécoul, Executive Director of DNDi.
DNDi was awarded USD 9 million over four years by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, forming part of the consortium’s USD 16.1 million project to develop new VL treatments in South Asia.
About visceral leishmaniasis (VL, or kala-azar)
Transmitted by a sandfly, the protozoan parasite Leishmania causes three different forms of disease, of which visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is the most severe. Leishmaniasis affects over 12 million people, with over 350 million people at risk in 98 countries.
VL is characterized by prolonged fever, enlarged spleen and liver, substantial weight loss, progressive anaemia, and is complicated by co-infection with other infectious diseases, such as HIV, tuberculosis, or malaria. Fatal if untreated, an estimated 500,000 new cases of VL occur each year. A significant proportion of clinical cases occurs in children. Officially, 50,000 to 60,000 deaths result from VL each year.
DNDi and its partners are strongly focused on contributing to control and elimination strategies for VL. Long-term projects focus on discovery and development of an easy-to-use, efficacious, oral drug. Shorter term projects aim at development and implementation of short-course monotherapy and combination regimens, as well as geographical extensions of existing treatments. The overall approach follows the 2010 recommendations of the WHO Expert Committee on the Control of Leishmaniasis.
Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi)
A not-for-profit research and development organization, DNDi works to deliver new treatments for neglected diseases, in particular human African trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, malaria, and with the recent expansion of its portfolio, specific helminth infections and paediatric HIV.
Role in the consortium: DNDi will begin implementing new VL treatments in India and Bangladesh, including pilot implementation projects with National Control Programmes of both countries, and will act as coordinator of the consortium.
New VL treatments – Asia
PDF doc: DNDi‘s role and projects in the VL South Asia Consortium
OneWorld Health (OWH)
Headquartered in South San Francisco, OneWorld Health is a non-profit organization that develops safe, effective and affordable new treatments and interventions for impoverished patients, especially children, suffering from neglected diseases in the developing world. www.oneworldhealth.org
Role in the consortium: OWH will investigate the use of combination therapies for VL within the private sector in India.
PDF doc: OneWorldHealth’s role and projects in the VL South Asia Consortium
Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR)
TDR is a global programme of scientific collaboration that helps coordinate, support and influence global efforts to combat a portfolio of major diseases of the poor and disadvantaged. Based at and executed by the World Health Organization (WHO), TDR is sponsored by UNICEF, UNDP, the World Bank, and WHO.http://who.int/tdr/
Role in the consortium: TDR, in collaboration with Banaras and McGill Universities, will study the impact of providing, for thefirst time, a single intravenous dose of AmBisome® given at government district hospitals and primary healthcare centres, which reduces the cost and time to treat, and study how best to seek out potential cases to prevent transmission. http://who.int/tdr/svc/research/visceral-leishmaniasis-elimination
PDF doc: TDR’s role and projects in the VL South Asia Consortium
Media contacts
Violaine Dällenbach
Press and Communication Manager, DNDi office: +41 22 906 92 47 mobile:+41 79 424 14 74 |
Jamie Guth
Communications Manager, TDR office: +41 22 791 1538 mobile: +41 79 441 22 89 |
Elena Pantjushenko
Associate, External Affairs & Communications, OWH Office: +1 650-392-2537 Mobile: +1 415-341-4140 |