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GAVI unveils strategy for sustained malaria vaccine supply

By Hassan Zaggi

In order to ensure sustained supply and affordability of the newly introduced Malaria vaccine, GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, has disclosed that an estimated 40-60 million doses  are needed by 2026 alone and growing to 80-100 million doses of vaccines needed each year by 2030.

 Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance,  disclosed this in a published white paper outlining actions that must be taken by governments, vaccine manufacturers and health agencies to meet this goal.

According to GAVI, with 475,000 deaths of children under the age of 5 in 2021 on the African continent alone, malaria remains one of Africa’s biggest killers, despite concerted efforts that have seen the global death toll drop by a third since 2000.

The pre-qualification of the world’s first malaria vaccine – RTS,S/AS01e, developed and manufactured by GSK and which took more than three decades to develop – will save more lives, while a second vaccine, R21/Matrix-M, developed by Oxford University and manufactured by Serum Institute of India (SII), could also be prequalified and recommended by WHO very soon.

GAVI, however, expressed concern that the major impediment that now stands in the way of a widespread roll out of malaria vaccines in endemic countries is supply.

According to Gavi’s market shaping roadmap for malaria vaccines, a production target of 40-60 million doses by 2026 is needed to meet countries’ needs, increasing to 80-100 million doses by 2030.

Such an outcome, the GAVI argued, would require countries and partners to work together in key areas such as demand forecasting, boosting the number of suppliers and technology transfer.

The report also outlines Gavi’s commitment to additional co-financing to ensure countries can access doses, support for countries to make timely applications, and fostering further innovation in malaria vaccination and greater integration with existing interventions.

According to the Chief Executive Officer of GAVI, Dr Seth Berkley: “It has taken the world more than 50 years to develop a malaria vaccine.

“Yet this year’s launch serves only as a reminder of what needs to happen now if we are to make malaria vaccines accessible to every child that needs them.

“We know how long African countries have waited for a vaccine against one of its greatest killers: if global health, countries, suppliers and civil society come together, we can soon contribute to preventing tens of thousands of child deaths every year along with other malaria control interventions.”

While vowing of its concerted efforts and its partners to do the same for malaria, GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, however, noted that Gavi’s market shaping work over more than 22 years has helped bring down prices and increase supply of life-saving vaccines and made them available to children everywhere with a focus on reaching zero dose children.

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