PRESS RELEASE-TOKYO-May 31, 2013
The Global Health Innovative
Technology Fund (GHIT Fund), a new
public-private partnership that’s
bringing Japanese research and
development (R&D) to the
global fight against infectious disease, will
announce at the 5th Tokyo
International Conference on African
Development (TICAD V) a series of
historic agreements to screen compound
libraries at Japanese
pharmaceutical companies and research institutes for new
treatments for malaria,
tuberculosis, and other afflictions that prey mainly on
the poorest of the poor.
“These thirteen agreements are
just the first of what we expect will be many global
health partnerships facilitated
and funded by the GHIT Fund that tap into Japan’s
enormous capacity for innovation
and technology,” said BT Slingsby, MD, PhD, MPH,
who serves as CEO and executive
director of the GHIT Fund.
The GHIT Fund is a public-private
partnership between the government of Japan,
a consortium of Japanese
pharmaceutical companies (Astellas Pharma Inc.;
Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd.; Eisai
Co., Ltd.; Shionogi & Co., Ltd.; and
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.)
and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Launched with a potential
five-year commitment of over US$100 million, the
fund is unique in that it
involves a consortium of pharmaceutical companies
who initiated a partnership with
government and civil society to support research
and development for neglected
diseases.
It also is the first time the
Japanese government, a longtime top-funder of
international aid, has made a
significant commitment to developing new
technologies that target diseases
that are mainly a burden on poor countries.
The Fund’s inaugural efforts are
financing the work of three non-profit product
development partnerships (PDPs)
to search for new drug candidates in compound
libraries maintained by Japanese
pharmaceutical companies and research institutes.
The PDPs involved in the work are
the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development
(TB Alliance), the Medicines for
Malaria Venture (MMV), and the Drugs for
Neglected Diseases initiative
(DNDi).
TB Alliance is partnering with
Eisai Co., Ltd., Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd.,
Shionogi & Co., Ltd. and
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd in a search for compounds
that show potential to fight
deadly, drug-resistant TB strains that are undermining
efforts to control the global TB
epidemic.
“We applaud the GHIT
collaboration for providing a meaningful mechanism to
facilitate Japanese companies’
involvement in TB drug research,” said Mel
Spigelman, MD, president and CEO
of TB Alliance. “These agreements enable
access to the compound libraries
of Japan’s top pharma companies, which
could help identify tomorrow’s
new and improved TB cures.”
MMV is partnering with Eisai Co.,
Ltd., Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd., Takeda
Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., along
with the Institute of Microbial Chemistry (BIKAKEN)
and Kitasato Institute, to seek
out new candidates for treating malaria. There is an
urgent need for new malaria
treatments as resistance to the most effective drugs
now available, artemisinin
combination therapies or ACTs, has emerged in Southeast Asia
and could spread elsewhere.
“MMV congratulates the Japanese
government and Japanese pharmaceutical
companies for launching this
innovative, cross-sectoral initiative to address
diseases of the developing world,
such as malaria,” said Dr. David Reddy, PhD,
CEO of MMV.
“Every minute of every day a
child in Africa dies from malaria.
Working with the GHIT Fund and
Japanese organizations will provide MMV access
to novel Japanese
compounds, expertise and support, which we hope will
open the door to new,
breakthrough malaria medicines to help stop this unnecessary loss of life.”
DNDi is partnering with Eisai,
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co, the Institute of
Microbial Chemistry (BIKAKEN) and
Kitasato Institute as part of its effort to
find new treatments for three
neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) that threaten
hundreds of millions of people
worldwide: leishmaniasis, Chagas disease and
sleeping sickness (Human African
trypanosomiasis or HAT).
Leishmaniasis, a parasite-borne
disease transmitted by sandflies, has a “visceral”
form that can kill and a
cutaneous form that causes painful, scarring skin ulcers.
Chagas disease,a parasite-borne
disease transmitted by insects known as “kissing bugs,”
kills more people in Latin
America than any other parasitic disease.
Sleeping sickness is a parasitic
disease transmitted by the bite of the tsetse fly.
The disease affects mostly poor
populations living in remote rural areas of Africa.
Untreated, it is usually fatal.
“Japanese companies and research
institutes are doing more than just giving us
access to their compound
libraries to identify new promising drugs to treat patients
for neglected diseases. The GHIT
Fund partnership provides an opportunity for DNDi
to expand collaborations with
leading Japanese pharmaceutical companies, research
institutions and academia,” said
Bernard Pécoul, MD, MPH, executive director, Drugs
for Neglected Disease initiative.
“GHIT is a catalyst for innovation and partnership
creation for other governments to
follow.”
The aforementioned 13
partnerships to probe the various drug compound
libraries emerged from a
call for proposals issued by the GHIT Fund in April
that was open to all
Japanese companies and research institutions and to
international PDPs
developing new tools to fight infectious disease.
Additional agreements are
expected from this call for proposals. The GHIT Fund
plans to seek another round of
proposals that could prompt more Japanese companies
and research organizations
to offer their compound libraries for screening.
In addition, the GHIT Fund also
is seeking grant proposals for partnerships
focused on developing new
medicines, vaccines or diagnostics that seek to
reduce the burden of AIDS,
tuberculosis, malaria, and a constellation of other
debilitating afflictions that
disproportionately affect poor people in developing
countries. A key requirement is
partnership: each proposal must involve both a
Japanese partner and an
international collaborator already working in global health R&D.
As explained by Kiyoshi Kurokawa,
MD, chair of the GHIT Fund board, “The key is for our Fund to provide speed and
impact through the facilitation and funding of collaborations.”
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