Fortune | FORTUNE 07月09日 17:19
Switzerland approves first antimalarial drug for infants in advance on disease that kills hundreds of thousands in Africa each year
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

瑞士药品管理局批准了针对小婴儿的疟疾药物,为对抗每年夺走数十万人生命的疾病带来了新希望。这种名为Coartem Baby的药物是诺华公司研发的,专为体重2至5公斤的婴儿设计。该药物的批准是瑞士首次通过快速审批程序,与世界卫生组织合作,帮助发展中国家获得急需的治疗。Coartem Baby是已获批用于其他年龄组的药物的低剂量版本,将有助于改善对年幼儿童的治疗,解决过去使用成人药物的“次优方案”。

👶 瑞士药品管理局批准了诺华公司研发的Coartem Baby,这是一种专门为体重2至5公斤的婴儿设计的疟疾药物,标志着在对抗非洲疟疾方面取得重要进展。

✅ Coartem Baby是Coartem的低剂量版本,Coartem此前已获批用于其他年龄组,包括较大儿童。此次批准是瑞士首次通过快速审批程序,与世界卫生组织合作,以帮助发展中国家获得所需的治疗。

🌍 专家指出,虽然年幼儿童的疟疾负担相对较低,但获得安全有效的药物对所有年龄段的儿童都至关重要。Coartem Baby的推出,解决了过去使用成人药物治疗婴儿的“次优方案”。

📢 诺华公司计划在疟疾流行的国家以“largely not-for-profit basis”的方式推广该药物。预计包括八个非洲国家在内的地区将在90天内批准该药物。

⚠️ 专家强调,在药物推广的同时,需要关注药物的可及性、定价透明度以及资金支持。因为疟疾抗药性问题日益严重,传统捐助国的全球健康支出有所下降。

Switzerland’s medical products authority has granted the first approval for a malaria medicine designed for small infants, touted as an advance against a disease that takes hundreds of thousands of lives — nearly all in Africa — each year.

Swissmedic gave a green light Tuesday for the medicine from Basel-based pharmaceutical company Novartis for treatment of babies with body weights between 2 and 5 kilograms (nearly 4½ to 11 pounds), which could pave the way for hard-hit African nations to follow suit in coming months.

The agency said that the decision is significant in part because it’s only the third time it has approved a treatment under a fast-track authorization process, in coordination with the World Health Organization, to help developing countries access needed treatment.

The newly approved medication, Coartem Baby, is a combination of two antimalarials. It is a lower dose version of a tablet previously approved for other age groups, including older children.

Dr. Quique Bassat, a malaria expert not affiliated with the Swiss review, said the burden of malaria in very young children is “relatively low” compared to older kids.

But access to such medicines is important to all, he said.

“There is no doubt that any child of whichever age — and particularly very, very young ones or very light-weighted ones — require a treatment,” said Bassat, the director- general of the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, known as ISGlobal.

Up to now, antimalarial drugs designed for older children have been administered to small infants in careful ways to avoid overdose or toxicity, in what Bassat called a “suboptimal solution” that the newly designed medicine could help rectify.

“This is a drug which we know is safe, we know works well, and therefore it will just be available as a new version for a specific age group,” he said.

Ruairidh Villar, a Novartis spokesperson, said that eight African countries took part in the assessment and are expected to approve the medicine within 90 days. The company said that it’s planning on a rollout on a “largely not-for-profit basis” in countries where malaria is endemic.

Dr. Bhargavi Rao, co-director of the Malaria Centre at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, noted that malaria cases continue to rise — especially in crisis-hit countries — despite new vaccines and programs targeting the mosquitoes that spread the parasite.

She said access strategies for the new medicine must include a look at where needs are greatest, and urged clarity on pricing.

“We need transparency around what Novartis’ ‘largely not for profit’ statement means including publicly available pricing, which countries will benefit and how long for,” she wrote in an email.

Still, she said it was “significant to finally have a suitable and safe treatment for very young children — more than 20 years since WHO first pre-qualified Coartem for older age groups.

She noted the announcement comes as resistance to antimalarials has been growing and many traditional donor countries have been sharply cutting outlays for global health — including for malaria programming and research.

The mosquito-borne illness is the deadliest disease in Africa, whose 1.5 billion people accounted for 95% of an estimated 597,000 malaria deaths worldwide in 2023, according to WHO. More than three-quarters of those deaths were among children.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

疟疾 婴儿 Coartem Baby 非洲 药物批准
相关文章