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Humans can’t shake the mosquito threat. Here’s what pharma has in the pipeline.

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Mosquitoes are less than an inch long and typically weigh 2.5 milligrams, but they exact a heavy toll and have been called the “deadliest animal on Earth.”

Female mosquitoes feed off human and animal hosts, siphoning a fraction of a milliliter of blood at a time to gain the protein they need to produce eggs. These fleeting interactions expose millions of people annually to dangerous illnesses like malaria, dengue, West Nile virus, Zika, chikungunya and Yellow Fever. Malaria alone sickened 247 million people in 2021 and killed more than 600,000, most of them children.

“It’s a big problem and there’s a lot of people that suffer because of [mosquito-borne illnesses] around the world,” said Dr. Matthew Memoli, director of the Laboratory of Infectious Diseases Clinical Studies Unit at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes for Health. 

While these diseases are less common in the U.S. than in other parts of the world, some experts believe they are becoming more prevalent as mosquitoes move into new areas due to deforestation, changes in land use and temperature shifts linked to climate change. In 2023, there were three locally-acquired malaria cases in Florida, Texas and Maryland, and over the years there have been dengue outbreaks in Florida, Hawaii and Texas. Memoli said the recent rise in cases might not be related to increased risk but better surveillance technology. 

“The question becomes: Are we really seeing it more or are we just able to find it now when we couldn’t find it before?” he said.

For decades, scientists have strived to create a slam-dunk vaccine for many mosquito-borne diseases, particularly malaria and dengue — the most common and deadly types. However, success has been hampered by the complexity of the viruses and parasites involved, as well as drug development and market-related challenges

Now, as humans continue their struggle with these dangerous insects, new vaccines are finally gaining ground.

Where the pipeline stands

Although the search for a malaria vaccine began in the 1960s, the first option — GSK’s Mosquirix —didn’t gain approval until 2021. But the shot is only 35% effective in preventing infection and last year, Reuters reported that funding challenges were keeping GSK from producing enough needed doses. A second vaccine, R21/Matrix-M, developed at the University of Oxford and the Serum Institute of India with a Novavax adjuvant, is about 66% effective and gained a recommendation from the World Health Organization in October

There are also two dengue vaccines in use —Sanofi’s Dengvaxia, and Qdenga from Takeda —  and one for Yellow fever, Sanofi’s YF-VAX. On Nov. 9, the FDA signed off on an accelerated approval for the first chikungunya vaccine, Ixchiq, from the French biotech Valneva. 

But for Zika and West Nile Virus, which is the most prevalent mosquito-borne illness in the U.S., a viable shot has remained elusive. Progress on Zika vaccines slowed when viral outbreaks waned, making it difficult to run clinical trials. Researchers are trying to overcome this problem by deliberately exposing people to the virus in human challenge studies. West Nile Vaccines have made it into phase 1 and 2 trials but haven’t gone further due to concerns about cost, vaccine safety and the difficulty of designing trials that can show the vaccines are effective against a disease that occurs unpredictably. 

Dengue fever florida

Containers containing mosquito larvae are seen as the Florida Keys mosquito control department inspects a neighborhood for any mosquitos or areas where they can breed as the county works to eradicate mosquitoes carrying dengue fever in 2020.

Joe Raedle via Getty Images

 

Public health officials around the world also use vaccines in combination with other mosquito-control strategies, such as preventing bites and controlling mosquito population through genetically modified mosquitoes in problem areas to cut the number of female mosquitoes that survive into adulthood.

Numerous new shots for mosquito-borne illnesses are in the works including an mRNA malaria vaccine, BNT165, which uses a novel multi-antigen approach and is now in phase 1 from BioNTech. The company hopes it will provide a highly effective option that’s easy to manufacture.

Valneva has an earlier-stage vaccine, VLA1601, for Zika, built on the same platform as the company’s approved Japanese encephalitis vaccine, Ixiaro. Moderna is in phase 2 on its Zika candidate mRNA-1893, which was well tolerated and induced a strong immune response to the virus in phase 1

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