March 14, 2002 Urgent Need to Kick-Start R&D for Killer Diseases in Poor Countries International Experts Call for New Public Initiatives and Global Support
New York, March 14, 2002 Research and development of new medicines
for diseases such as sleeping sickness, kala azar, and malaria that kill
millions each year in the developing world is urgently needed, according
to a group of 150 international experts meeting in New York this week.
"Doctors in poor countries are forced to use old and ineffective treatments
to treat their patients who are dying from treatable diseases because profit,
not need, is driving the development of new medicines," said Morten Rostrup,
MD, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
International Council president, in his opening address. "Only 16 new drugs
were developed for tropical diseases and tuberculosis in the past 25 years.
We have the scientific know-how to right this fatal imbalance, but serious
political and financial commitment is lacking."
Conference participants explored new paradigms for stimulating research
and development for drugs for neglected diseases, including a not-for-profit,
needs-driven initiative to support research and development of new drugs
for the most neglected diseases. Financial and political support from the
United States and other wealthy countries would be urgently needed for the
success of such an initiative. Building up the drug research and development
capacity in developing countries must also be a key part of the solution,
according to conference participants.
Prominent members of public research institutes in Brazil, India, and Malaysia,
the Pasteur Institute, the World Health Organization/World Bank/United Nations
Development Program for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR),
and MSF are actively working to define a needs-based solution to the drugs
for neglected diseases crisis. Others are certain to join this active effort.
In collaboration with partners, MSF is funding five pilot projects to develop
new drugs for malaria, kala azar, and sleeping sickness.
"Breakthroughs in medical science have given doctors in wealthy countries
impressive new tools for treating everything from cardiovascular disease
and cancer to impotence and baldness. But very little is happening for infectious
diseases of the developing world that are most neglected by the pharmaceutical
industry because they are not profitable," said Els Torreele, PhD, chair
of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Working Group.
"Global health is a public responsibility. When the market and industry
fail to meet the health needs of a large part of the world's population,
the public sector must step in," concluded Dr Rostrup.
Convened by the international medical aid agency Doctors Without Borders/Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF) and the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Working
Group in New York, "The Crisis of Neglected Diseases: Developing Treatments
and Ensuring Access" conference brought together over 400 people, including
representatives from the US government, the European Union, the World Health
Organization, representatives from neglected-disease affected countries,
and the pharmaceutical industry, to address the inadequacy of the current
system of drug development.
For more information on "The Crisis of Neglected Diseases: Developing Treatments
and Ensuring Access" conference, please visit www.neglecteddiseases.org.