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GSK plc today announced new data from the AReSVi-006 phase III trial evaluating the efficacy of a single dose of AREXVY™ against lower respiratory tract disease caused by the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in adults aged 60 years and older over multiple RSV seasons and after annual revaccination.

The results presented on June 21, 2023, show that one dose of AREXVY is efficacious against RSV-LRTD and severe LRTD over two full RSV seasons.

In a press release, Tony Wood, Chief Scientific Officer of GSK, stated, "These data show the efficacy of a single dose of our vaccine over two RSV seasons against RSV-LRTD, including in the populations most at risk due to age or underlying medical conditions."

"This reinforces our confidence in its potential to make a significant public health impact."

"We look forward to discussing these results with regulators and vaccine recommending bodies and collecting more data from the ongoing clinical development program."

As of June 2023, there are two approved RSV vaccines for older people in the U.S.

UPDATE - The ACIP voted to recommend AREXVY on June 21, 2023.

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Bird flu vaccine
Avian influenza vaccines are authorized and warehoused
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News18 recently reported the U.K.'s Science, Innovation, and Technology Committee was informed the Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is highly likely heading in its direction, thanks to climate change.

We don't know what will arrive until it does, was a comment shared during the meeting on June 14, 2023.

Last year, the U.K. Health Security Agency confirmed a case of CCHF in England in a woman who had recently traveled to Central Asia. This was only the third case of CCHF imported to the U.K.

Outbreaks have been confirmed in Iraq, Namibia, and Pakistani in 2023. In Iraq, there were 219 confirmed cases of CCHF from January 2022 to late June 2022. 

First described in the Crimean Peninsula in 1944, CCHF is endemic in all of Africa, the Balkans, the Middle East, and Asia, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

The WHO says CCHF is a viral disease spread via ticks with a fatality rate of between 10 and 40%.

Human-to-human transmission of CCHF has been reported following close contact with blood, secretions, or other bodily fluids of infected persons. And cases have been reported among health workers caring for infected people.

Regarding preventive vaccines, the WHO published an overview of CCHF vaccine candidates.

And in March 2023, eBioMedicine published a study that supported further development of the ChAd platform expressing the CCHFV GPC to seek an effective vaccine against CCHFV.

In the U.K., no licensed human vaccine or approved medication targeting CCHF is available as of June 20, 2023.

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SK bioscience today announced the company has received the WHO Emergency Use Listing (EUL) of its COVID-19 vaccine, SKYCovione™ (SKYCovion™, GBP510).

This COVID-19 vaccine was developed with the Institute for Protein Design (IPD) at the University of Washington SCHOOL OF MEDICINE and uses GSK's pandemic adjuvant.

SKYCovione is also the world's first medicine developed using computational protein design, an approach that uses Rosetta software to engineer protein structures with enough precision to place individual atoms exactly where desired.

Jaeyong Ahn, CEO of SK bioscience, commented in a press release on June 19, 2023, "Based on the immunogenicity and safety profile, SKYCovione has become the first Korean vaccine to be granted to the WHO EUL."

"We will be committed to developing more vaccines not just to strengthen Korea's vaccine sovereignty but also to enable equitable access to the vaccine."

The development of SKYCovione has been supported by funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations with support from the European Horizon 2020 Programme.

SKYCovione (known as SKYCovion in the UK) was approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency for adults in May 2023.

SKYCovione is a self-assembled nanoparticle vaccine targeting the receptor binding domain of the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein for SARS-CoV-2. 

The vaccine can be stored between 2-8 °C, making it suitable for use in countries where ultra-low cold chain storage facilities are unavailable. The ease of distribution helps to achieve greater access to vaccines in low-income countries.

Other COVID-19 vaccine news is posted by Precision Vaccinations.

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CancerVAX, Inc. announced today that it recently launched a funding round of up to $10 million to empower the Utah-based Company to continue working on its breakthrough cancer treatments.

CancerVax CEO Ryan Davies said in a June 14, 2023, press release, “We’re working with a research team at UCLA to help us develop these treatments. We’ve raised $2 million of seed funding thus far and are using the StartEngine platform to raise an additional $10 million to further the development of these novel cancer therapies.”

CancerVAX recently announced that its UCLA research team had made positive progress towards developing a treatment for Ewing sarcoma, a deadly form of cancer.

Ewing sarcoma is an aggressive bone and soft-tissue cancer with limited chances of cure, more prevalent in adolescents and young adults.

Current therapies for Ewing sarcoma have reached a plateau over the last several decades, and there is an urgent need for improved outcomes.

Approaches that target chemotherapy-resistant tumors, especially in metastatic and/or microscopic residual disease, would be revolutionary, wrote CancerVAX on June 12, 2023.

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Antimalarial Treatments

Antimalarial Treatment 2025

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Algorithm for the Diagnosis and Management of Malaria outlines recommended steps for treating malaria patients. The CDC's Yellow Book outlines various treatment options for Malaria. Antimalarial treatment must be initiated immediately upon diagnosis of Malaria, according to the CDC's Malaria Diagnosis and Treatment. Furthermore, the CDC's Malaria Treatment Tables guide malaria treatment, and options for treating pregnant women are presented in the Alternatives for Pregnant Women. However, presumptive treatment should be reserved for extreme circumstances, such as when there is clinical suspicion of severe disease in a setting where prompt laboratory diagnosis is unavailable.

The World Health Organization's (WHO) recommendations on malaria elimination strategies may include mass drug administration, testing, treatment, or prevention of mass relapse. These strategies are generally not recommended in elimination settings unless there is local malaria transmission. The WHO published a Q&A developed by the Global Malaria Programme in collaboration with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).

Malaria Medications

On November 12, 2025, Novartis announced the Phase III trial for KLU156 (ganaplacide/lumefantrine, or GanLum), which meets the primary endpoint of non-inferiority to standard of care Coartem® (artemether-lumefantrine); Demonstrates PCR-corrected cure rate of 97.4% based on estimand method, equating to 99.2% under conventional per protocol analysis; the Novel ingredient in GanLum, ganaplacide, has an entirely new mechanism of action. If approved, GanLum would represent the first significant innovation in malaria treatment since 1999, with the potential to kill drug-resistant parasites and block transmission.

On July 22, 2025, the New England Journal of Medicine published a study that found ivermectin, an antiparasitic drug, reduced the incidence of Malaria by 26%. A 2019 study concluded similar benefits.

On July 8, 2025, Novartis announced that Swissmedic had approved Coartem® Baby (Riamet® Baby) as the first malaria medicine for newborns and young infants. The new treatment was developed in collaboration with Medicines for Malaria Venture to treat the potentially deadly mosquito-borne disease.

As of July 2025, four treatment options are available for P. falciparum infections acquired in areas with chloroquine resistance, specifically for adolescents and adults. These include artemether-lumefantriCoartemtem®), the preferred option if readily available, and atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone), according to the CDC. On June 20, 2023, the BMC Malaria Journal published a perspective article titled "ve: Real-life effectiveness of antimalarial treatment regime". Options for the treatment of pregnant women are presented in the Alternatives for Pregnant Women.

Tafenoquine is aKODA™), an 8-aminoquinoline, an antimalarial approved in the U.S., and it targets the liver stage of P. vivax malaria. When combined with chloroquine, tafenoquine provides a radical cure for the treatment of both the disease's blood and liver stages.

Novartis and Medicines for Malaria Venture announced on November 23, 2022, their decision to proceed with a Phase 3 study for a novel ganaplicide/lumefantrine-SDF combination in adults and children with Malaria. Ganaplacide is a novel agent with a new mechanism of action combined with a new formulation of lumefantrine optimized for once-daily dosing. Pyramax® (pyronaridine-artesunate) was included in the WHO's list of pre-qualified medicines in 2012 and the WHO's Essential Medicines Lists for adults and children in 2017. Pyramax subsequently underwent a positive review by the WHO's Advisory Committee on the Safety of Medicinal Products in 2019, including interim data from the CANTAM study.

Ocean Biomedical announces the discovery of a new therapeutic approach that could lead to the development of a novel class of antimalarials. Promising results from the malaria program include a monoclonal antibody that kills 94%-99% of malaria parasites in culture, as well as a small-molecule drug that kills 100% of parasites at low nanomolar concentrations. On October 24, 2023, Chief Scientist Jonathan Kurtis, MD, PhD, received the prestigious Falk Medical Research Trust Transformational Award of $1 million to advance a new class of antimalarial drugs, specifically targeting Candida. 

Global Health Innovative Technology Fund announced on December 14, 2023, that it would invest approximately $3.3 million in a global, multicenter Phase III clinical trial project led by Fosun Pharma for a triple artemisinin combination drug (Artemether-Lumefantrine-Amodiaquine fixed-dose formulation) against Malaria, aiming to accelerate the development and commercialization of this new drug combination.

Insight Partners publishes a new research report on the global malaria treatment market, which is projected to grow at a CAGR of 4.9% from 2022 to 2028.

Malaria Monoclonal Antibody

Artesunate for Injection™ was FDA-approved in May 2020 and is indicated for infants, children, adults, and pregnant women with severe Malaria or those unable to tolerate oral antimalarials. Available in vials of 110mg, Artesunate for Injection is dosed at 2.4 mg/kg given intravenously at 0, 12, and 24 hours, then daily for up to seven days. If after 24 hours of Artesunate, the percent parasitemia is ≤ 1% and the patient can tolerate oral medications, the patient can be switched to an antimalarial regimen.

The Lancet Infectious Diseases published results from an NIAID phase 1 clinical study on January 25, 2023, that found the antimalarial monoclonal antibody CIS43LS conferred high protection against parasitemia at doses of 20 mg/kg or 40 mg/kg administered intravenously fo,llowed by controlled human malaria infection, providing evidence that this approach might be helpful to prevent Malaria across several clinical use cases. The NEJM published an Original Article on October 31, 2022: Safety and Efficacy of a Monoclonal Antibody against Malaria in Mali. CONCLUSIONS - CIS43LS was protected against P. falciparum infection in a phase 2 clinical trial over a 6-month malaria season without evident safety concerns. In a related Editorial by Umberto D'Alessandro, M.D., Ph.D., currently available interventions for malaria control are unlikely to achieve the vision of a malaria-free world. And the NEJM published Aan ORIGINAL ARTICLE on August 4, 2022, anw-Dose Subcutaneous or Intravenous Monoclonal Antibody to Prevent Malaria. On October 18, 2022, the peer-reviewed journal Cell published results from a phase 1 clinical trial that concluded that S, a potent and safe antimalarial monoclonal antibody, demonstrated 88% protective efficacy against infection in healthy adults.

Malaria Testing

Malaria tests can detect parasites in a person's blood.

Malaria Netting

On March 14, 2023, the WHO recommended a new class of long-lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs) that combine insecticide mixtures with different modes of action. The Lancet published results from a study in January 223 that found chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid LLINs provided greater protection from Malaria than pyrethroid-only LLINs in an area with pyrethroid-resistant mosquitoes. Pyriproxyfen-pyrethroid LLINs conferred protection similar to pyrethroid-only LLINs. A study published by the BMJ Global Health Journal suggests that LLINs reduced the incidence in the first year. However, of the 88 malaria-endemic countries that provided data for 2010–2020, 78 did not report detecting resistance to at least one insecticide class reported by WHO in December 2022.

Malaria Vaccines

Malaria vaccines are approved for use in 2025.

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Malaria antibody and antiparasite treatments are FDA approved
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VLA15 is a multivalent recombinant protein Lyme disease vaccine candidate
medication research 2023
Increasingly Diverse Clinical Trial Types and Data Sources
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The U.S. Department of State today reissued its Level 2: Exercise Increased Caution for the Dominican Republic, which is located on the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean region.

On June 6, 2023, the State Department confirmed civil unrest and health issues remain a concern for visitors.

The development of a professional tourist police corps, the institution of a 911 system in many parts of the country, and a concentration of resources in resort areas mean these tend to be better policed than urban areas like Santo Domingo.

From a health perspective, Dengue is a risk in many parts of the Caribbean, including the Dominican Republic.

Furthermore, check your vaccines and medicines and visit a healthcare provider at least a month before your trip to get what you need while traveling, says the U.S. CDC.

 

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Digital certificates for health and travel controlled by the WHO