Vaccine major Serum Institute of India (SII) on Monday 20
May is shipping its first set of R21/Matrix-M™ malaria vaccine to Africa. In total,
1,63,800 doses of malaria vaccine are specifically allocated for the Central African Republic (CAR) region, out of
which only 43,200 doses are dispatched from SII facility, the company said in a
statement.
"The initial shipment will be sent
to the Central African Republic (CAR), followed by other African countries such
as South Sudan and Democratic
Republic of Congo in the next coming
days," the company said in a statement.
Developed in collaboration with the University of Oxford and Novavax’s
Matrix-M™ adjuvant, the R21//Matrix-M vaccine is the second malaria vaccine to
be authorized for use in children in malaria-endemic regions.
“As two diverse
democracies, the United States and India have flourishing private sectors that
foster innovation, knowledge, and access to high-quality healthcare. The development of the R21/Matrix-M
malaria vaccine represents a great step forward in our battle against this
deadly parasite. The quality, affordable vaccines that will be produced
through this partnership between Novavax and SII will prevent hundreds of
thousands of deaths every year across the globe,” said the Hon. Eric Garcetti,
US Ambassador to India.
The R21/Matrix-M™ malaria vaccine, developed through collaboration between the
Jenner Institute at Oxford University and the SII
leveraging by Novavax’s saponin-based adjuvant technology, received support from the European and Developing
Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP), the Wellcome Trust, and the European
Investment Bank (EIB).