Auckland: A new vaccine to combat the debilitating disease caused by rheumatic
fever may soon become a reality, saving hundreds of thousands of deaths
from preventable heart disease around the world each year.
Rheumatic fever is caused by infection with group A streptococcus
(GAS). Recurrent infections cause chronic damage to the heart valves
known as rheumatic heart disease (RHD).
The GAS bacterium also causes serious bloodstream infections and
flesh eating disease, kidney disease as well as sore throats and skin
sores.
This causes more than half a million deaths each year around the
world.
For 80 years now scientists have been trying to develop a vaccine,
but the combination of lack of profitability (it's the world's youngest
and poorest that are most affected), the challenge of tackling a wide
variety of strains, and the risks associated with trials have made the
pharmaceutical industry reluctant to drive this forward.
But now a new initiative funded by the Australian and New Zealand
governments known as CANVAS (Coalition to Advance New Vaccines for Group
A Streptococcus) is finally making progress.
"This is the most confident I've felt yet that a vaccine is within
reach,” says Professor Fraser who is also CANVAS co-Principal
Investigator. “We have the capacity. We have the will of the
international community, and we have the funding of two governments to
see this through. In as little as three years I think we might have a
vaccine in late-stage trials.”
New Zealand has been at the forefront of efforts to tackle rheumatic
fever with significant investments in public health initiatives and
more recently a commitment to develop a group A streptococcus vaccine.
Both Australia and New Zealand are investing more than any other country in the world into this commitment.
CANVAS - a collaboration between the University of Western Australia
affiliated Telethon Kids Institute and the University of Auckland -
plans to assess several vaccines candidates and fast track development
of a vaccine most likely to be safe, efficacious and cost effective.
CANVAS has three goals in its first stage: (i) Identify the most
common disease strains; (ii) evaluate which vaccines currently under
development best target these and (iii) make the financial case for the
development of the most effective vaccine. Subsequent stages will
accelerate development of the best candidate, through government funding
and global partnerships.
The CANVAS team has been working with scientists from around the
world and has now identified three to four vaccines with promise, from
which the strongest will be selected for development. This selection
could happen as soon as December this year.
"This new era has resulted in wonderful collaborations on a global
scale,” says Professor Fraser. “Efforts to develop rheumatic fever
vaccines have involved researchers from countries such as the United
States, Italy, Brazil, Australia and New Zealand collaborating with
researchers in Mali, Nicaragua, Fiji, India, and South Africa. This
truly global effort is getting results. I feel confident we will see a
vaccine soon.”
Funding for CANVAS is provided through the National Health and
Medical Research Council in Australia and the Health Research Council of
New Zealand.
For media enquiries email s.phillips@auckland.ac.nz