Journal article icon

Journal article

Development of a malaria vaccine.

Abstract:
Development of an effective malaria vaccine poses a major scientific challenge both in the laboratory and in the field. Such a vaccine is necessary because of the massive disease burden of malaria in the developing world, the global spread of drug resistance, and the difficulty of sustainable control of the mosquito vector. Animal models have shown the immunological feasibility of vaccines targeted against different stages of parasite development, and studies in human volunteers have shown that a recombinant protein vaccine can protect against challenge with the homologous strain of parasite. However, both natural and vaccine-induced immunity are hampered by the remarkable capacity of the parasites to vary critical antigenic structures; large field trials of a synthetic peptide vaccine gave equivocal results. In an attempt to overcome the dual difficulty of poor immunogenicity and parasite diversity, much experimental work is now focused on complex antigenic constructs, delivered as DNA vaccines or in live vectors such as vaccinia, with multiple targets at each stage of parasite development.
Publication status:
Published

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1016/s0140-6736(97)03256-x

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
Tropical Medicine
Role:
Author


Journal:
Lancet More from this journal
Volume:
350
Issue:
9092
Pages:
1696-1701
Publication date:
1997-12-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1474-547X
ISSN:
0140-6736


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:36128
UUID:
uuid:e0acece9-b681-4cde-9cc1-3418647066b3
Local pid:
pubs:36128
Source identifiers:
36128
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP