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GHIT Fund invests $10.7 million to fight TB, malaria, leishmaniasis and dengue

Global Health Innovative Technology Fund
Nov. 6, 2015, 9:31 p.m.

November 5, 2015 - The Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT Fund), which in the last two years has invested US$43 million to develop innovative tools for fighting diseases worldwide, today announced it is investing $10.7 million* at multiple points in the product development pipeline to seek new interventions for malaria, tuberculosis (TB), leishmaniasis and dengue.

The projects come at a crucial time for all four diseases: new drugs and vaccines for TB and malaria are desperately needed to fight rising resistance to existing therapies, while dengue infections continue to mount worldwide—and with no drugs or vaccines yet on the market to treat or prevent them. Meanwhile, disease experts fear the chaos caused by the war in Syria and neighboring Iraq could greatly intensify infections with leishmaniasis, a dangerous and potentially deadly disease spread by sandflies.

“We are excited about this latest round of investments as they showcase our aggressive ‘Hit-to-Lead Platform’ (HTLP) for advancing potentially promising new interventions that have been identified through our Screening Platform,” said GHIT Fund’s CEO Dr. BT Slingsby. “We’re also funding five new projects through our Product Development Platform and rolling out our inaugural investments in our Grand Challenges program,” he added. “Through these distinctly different initiatives, GHIT is establishing an effective, efficient and multifaceted process for harnessing Japanese innovation to fight diseases that are a major source of illness in the developing world.”

GHIT’s new Grand Challenges Targeted Research Platform initiative is expanding the scope of GHIT’s work to early-phase R&D investigating new approaches, concepts and constructs for fighting neglected infectious diseases. It’s modeled after, and run in coordination with, the Grand Challenges initiative launched by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 10 years ago to foster creative and bold breakthroughs targeting significant global health and development problems.

One of the GHIT Grand Challenges is awarding $297,133 to support a partnership between the Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV), and the University of Melbourne. The three organizations are working together to develop tests or “assays” that would enable them to find a way to overcome the parasite’s drug resistance. They will work to identify compounds capable of inhibiting proteasome activity within the cells of malaria parasites, the action that is so critical to the parasite’s survival.

Preliminary evidence suggests that proteasome inhibitors, a class of drugs currently used as anticancer agents, might have the potential to restore the effectiveness of the world’s leading malaria drug, artemisinin, and its derivatives. In parts of Southeast Asia, malaria drugs are losing their effectiveness, as parasites develop resistance to both artemisinin medications and the “partner” drugs administered alongside them. Taken together they are known as “artemisinin combination therapies” (or ACTs) and are the current gold standard for malaria care.

“These projects are early stage, but build on Takeda’s work with proteasome inhibitors, which has already led to new medicines for other diseases, including certain types of cancer,” said Dr. Timothy Wells, chief scientific officer at Medicines for Malaria Venture. “Combining proteasome expertise with malaria expertise represents a very innovative approach.”

Meanwhile, GHIT’s HTLP approach is deepening relationships established through GHIT between product development partnerships fighting neglected diseases and Japanese companies and academic organizations that may have relevant compounds. And GHIT’s Product Development Platform is funding later-stage development work for drugs, vaccines and diagnostics.

Hit-to-Lead Platform: Interest Grows as Promising Projects Advance

GHIT awarded the following four projects a total of $3.5 million as part of its HTLP program. All the projects originated from collaborations established through GHIT’s Screening Platform, which funded efforts to screen the diverse and target-rich compound libraries curated by Japanese pharmaceutical companies for potentially promising therapies.

This round of HTLP investments also includes targeted investments from GHIT’s new partner, the Wellcome Trust, the world’s second highest spending charitable foundation and a global leader in funding of innovative biomedical research. Specifically, Wellcome Trust will support two innovative partnerships aimed at developing new drug candidates for malaria and tuberculosis.

Product Development Platform: Accelerating Vaccine and Drug Development

In its fifth round of awards, GHIT’s Product Development Platform is funding work on vaccines for leishmaniasis, dengue and TB, along with research into two malaria drug candidates.

Launching GHIT’s Targeted Research Platform in Partnership with Grand Challenges

GHIT is funding two early-stage malaria R&D projects as it moves forward with its first projects under its new Grand Challenges partnership.

In addition to the aforementioned partnership between MMV, Takeda, and the University of Melbourne, GHIT awarded $993,030 to Australia’s Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Japan’s Ehime University, Switzerland’s Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND), and the Japanese biotech firm CellFree Sciences Co., Ltd. to develop biomarkers for malaria that could drive the development of new diagnostic tools. This is the second diagnostic project in the GHIT portfolio.

* All amounts listed at the exchange rate of USD1 = JPY100.


Source: Global Health Innovative Technology Fund