GENEVA,  Switzerland, April 19, 2017/ -- This week, leaders from governments,  pharmaceutical companies and charitable organizations convened at a  five-day summit in Geneva to pledge new commitments to the collective  efforts to control and eliminate neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). The  summit coincided with the launch of the World Health Organization’s  (WHO) Fourth Report on NTDs, showing transformational progress against  these debilitating diseases, and a commitment by the United Kingdom to  more than double its funding for NTDs.
  The meeting comes five years after the launch of the London Declaration on NTDs (http://APO.af/5jKHBH),  a commitment by the public and private sectors to achieve the WHO goals  for control, elimination and eradication of 10 NTDs. In that time,  billions of treatments have been donated by pharmaceutical companies and  delivered to impoverished communities in nearly 150 countries, reaching  nearly a billion people in 2015.
  NTDs are some of the oldest and  most painful diseases, afflicting the world’s poorest communities. One  in six people suffer from NTDs worldwide, including more than half a  billion children. NTDs disable, debilitate and perpetuate cycles of  poverty, keeping children out of school, parents out of work, and  dampening hope of any chance of an economic future.
  New Report Shows Dramatic Progress 
  A new report titled Integrating Neglected Tropical Diseases in Global Health and Development (http://APO.af/GaR2bN)  by the WHO revealed that more people are being reached with needed NTD  interventions than ever before. In 2015, nearly a billion people  received treatments donated by pharmaceutical companies for at least one  NTD, representing a 36 percent increase since 2011, the year before the  launch of the London Declaration. As more districts, countries and  regions eliminate NTDs, the number of people requiring treatments has  decreased from 2 billion in 2010 to 1.6 billion in 2015.
  “WHO has  observed record-breaking progress towards bringing ancient scourges  like sleeping sickness and elephantiasis to their knees,” says WHO  Director-General, Dr. Margaret Chan. “Over the past 10 years, millions  of people have been rescued from disability and poverty, thanks to one  of the most effective global partnerships in modern public health.”
  The  report detailed progress against each disease, citing countries and  regions that are reaching control and elimination goals for specific  NTDs. Highlights include: 
- Lymphatic filariasis (LF) racing toward finish line: In  the last year, eight countries (Cambodia, Cook Islands, Maldives,  Marshall Islands, Niue, Sri Lanka, Togo and Vanuatu) eliminated LF, and  10 other countries are waiting on surveillance results to verify  elimination. Thanks to strong programs, the number of people globally  requiring preventative treatment has dropped from 1.4 billion in 2011 to  fewer than 950 million in 2015.
 
 
- Fewest-ever cases of human African trypanosomiasis (HAT, or sleeping sickness): In  2015, there were fewer reported cases of sleeping sickness than any  other year in history, with fewer than 3,000 cases worldwide – an 89  percent reduction since 2000. Innovative vector control and  diagnostic technologies, supported by increasing numbers of product  development partnerships, are revolutionizing sleeping sickness  diagnosis, prevention and treatment.
 
- Eighty-two percent decrease in visceral leishmaniasis (VL) cases in India, Nepal and Bangladesh: Since  2008, cases of VL across India, Nepal and Bangladesh have decreased by  82 percent due to improvements in vector control, social mobilization of  village volunteers, collaboration with other NTD programs and drug  donations from industry partners.
 
- Guinea worm disease nearing eradication: Cases of Guinea worm disease have reduced from an estimated 3.5 million  in 1986 to just 25 human cases in 2016 in just three countries – Chad,  Ethiopia and South Sudan.
 
 
Global Donors Pledge Additional Support
  Governments  and other donors announced new commitments at the summit to expand the  reach and impact of NTD programs around the world. The Bill &  Melinda Gates Foundation committed $335 million in grants over the next  four years to support a diverse group of NTD programs focused on drug  development and delivery, disease surveillance and vector control. The  commitment includes $42 million to support The Carter Center’s guinea  worm eradication initiative, as well as dedicated funding to accelerate  the elimination of African sleeping sickness.
  “NTDs are some of  the most painful, debilitating and stigmatizing diseases that affect the  world’s poorest communities. That’s why we helped launch the London  Declaration, a historic milestone that led to significant progress in  treating and reducing the spread of NTDs and demonstrated the impact  that the public sector, the private sector, communities and NGOs can  have by working together,” said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill &  Melinda Gates Foundation.
  “Thanks to this partnership, these  neglected diseases are now getting the attention they deserve so fewer  people have to suffer from these treatable conditions. There have been  many successes in the past five years, but the job is not done yet. We  have set ambitious targets for 2020 that require the continued  commitment of pharmaceutical companies, donor and recipient governments,  and frontline health workers to ensure drugs are available and  delivered to the hardest to reach people.”
  The Belgian government  also pledged an additional $27 million, spread equally over the next  nine years, toward the elimination of sleeping sickness in the  Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This amount will be matched for  the next three years by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,  establishing a platform for increased collaboration between Belgium, the  DRC and the broader NTD partnership.
  As part of its commitment  to eliminating HAT, Vestergaard pledged to donate 20 percent of its  insecticide-treated “tiny targets” used to control the tsetse flies that  carry the disease, scaling over the next three years towards 100  percent as elimination nears.
  These commitments build on the UK  Government’s announcement earlier this week, in which it pledged almost  $450 million over 5 years to support NTD control and elimination efforts  around the world.
  Industry Contributions Expand Scale and Reach of NTD Program
  Progress  against NTDs has been enabled by the large-scale donation of medicines  by 10 pharmaceutical companies. In the five years since the London  Declaration, companies have donated over 7 billion treatments that, with  the support of partners, now reach nearly 1 billion people every year.  These donations, worth an estimated $19 billion from 2012 through 2020,  greatly multiply the impact of donor investments; USAID estimates that  each dollar invested in delivery leverages $26 worth of donated drugs.
  In a statement (http://APO.af/55buit)  released today, industry leaders reaffirmed their 2012 pledge to do  their part to beat these diseases, and encouraged other sectors to  maintain their commitments as well.   “The  London Declaration is a powerful example of the impact of successful  partnerships,” said Haruo Naito, CEO of Eisai and an original signatory  of the London Declaration. “By leveraging our resources and  focusing on a common goal, we are already making unprecedented progress  towards eliminating these horrific diseases. The work we are doing today  is a long-term investment into a healthier and more prosperous future.”
  In  addition to donations, pharmaceutical companies are working together  and with research institutes to discover and develop new tools to  prevent, diagnose and treat NTDs. A report (http://APO.af/YkMskp)  released today by the International Federation of Pharmaceutical  Manufacturers and Associations collected the full scope of industry  investment in NTD R&D, including: 
- Sanofi and the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi)  are developing a new oral drug candidate for HAT, fexinidazole, which  would replace the current mixed oral-intravenous drug regimen.  Fexinidazole could represent a therapeutic breakthrough which will  support sustainable elimination efforts as per the WHO roadmap for 2020.  The drug is expected to be submitted for regulatory approval later in  2017.
 
- Several  companies are working to develop pediatric formulations of existing NTD  medicines, including Bayer (nifurtimox, for Chagas disease), Merck KGaA  (praziquantel, for schistosomiasis), and Elea/Mundo Sano (who are  working with DNDi to develop a second pediatric source of  benznidazole, for Chagas disease), while Johnson & Johnson  (mebendazole, for soil-transmitted helminths) developed a new chewable  form of mebendazole, recently approved by the FDA, for children too  young to swallow.
 
- AbbVie,  Bayer, Eisai, Johnson & Johnson and Merck KGaA are part of the  Macrofilaricide Drug Accelerator Program, an initiative aimed at  identifying and generating new drug compounds that can kill the adult  worms that cause onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis.
 
- Bayer is working with DNDi to develop emodepside, an oral treatment for lymphatic filariasis and river blindness
 
- Eisai is working with DNDi to develop ravuconazole, a new oral drug currently in clinical trials for Chagas disease, and is partnering with DNDi to develop ravuconazole in a new disease area, mycetoma.
 
- GlaxoSmithKline and DNDi have agreed to jointly pursue the pre-clinical development of the two  novel candidates for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis; the  candidates were developed by a collaboration between GSK and the  University of Dundee’s Drug Discovery Unit, and the work was funded by  Wellcome. The agreement for pre-clinical development will be conditional  on signing an additional agreement. 
 
- In 2015, Eisai, Shionogi, Takeda, AstraZeneca and DNDi launched the NTD Drug Discovery Booster (http://APO.af/bbHZQG),  a multi-company effort to accelerate the discovery of new drugs for  leishmaniasis and Chagas disease. In 2016 they were joined by Celgene  Global Health. Merck KGaA announced today that it will join the  consortium.
 
 
- Many  companies – including AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb,  Celgene, Chemo, Daiichi Sankyo, Eisai, Elea, Eli Lilly,  GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson, Merck KGaA, MSD, Novartis,  Pfizer, Sanofi, Shionogi, and Takeda – have given DNDi and other non-profits access to their compound libraries and/or contribute scientific and technical expertise to DNDi and conduct pre-clinical and clinical studies to facilitate the development of new drugs to combat various NTDs.
 
- Gilead  is collaborating with the US Department of Defense, Centers for Disease  Control and Prevention, and National Institutes of Health as well as  multiple academic institutions to discover and develop novel antivirals  for highly pathogenic infections and neglected/emerging viral diseases,  including dengue fever. GS-5734, Gilead’s most advanced investigational  agent, is currently being studied in Ebola survivors.
 
 
Companies  are also working with partners to solve supply chain problems, develop  program strategies and build in-country capacity to ensure that drugs,  tools and other interventions reach those who need them most. 
  Addressing the Challenges Ahead
  Though  tremendous progress has been made in reducing the burden of NTDs,  global control and elimination targets cannot be met without increased  financial support, stronger political commitment and better tools to  prevent, diagnose and treat the diseases. This week, partners from  private philanthropy, affected country governments and cross-sector  partnerships recommitted to leveraging their respective resources and  expertise to fill critical gaps.
  Financial Resources
  Although  nearly a billion people received NTD treatments in 2015, more funding  is needed to ensure that NTD programs reach all people and communities  affected by the diseases. WHO estimates that 340 million people in  Sub-Saharan Africa could be covered by new investments of $150 million  per year through the year 2020.
  In addition to government  commitments, private philanthropy is helping to address these gaps by  supporting drug delivery and surveillance programs, as well as research  and development into new medicines, diagnostics and other health tools. The END Fund (www.END.org),  founded shortly after the London Declaration, has raised over $75  million to target the five most common NTDs, helping to treat over 145  million people around the world.
  Political Commitment 
  Strong  leadership from affected countries is vital to sustaining progress  against NTDs, particularly in the face of shifting economic climates and  competing health priorities. Despite these challenges, some countries  are increasing financing for NTD programs and integrating them into  national health systems. Among other countries, Ethiopia has made  significant strides in fighting trachoma by including progress against  the disease as a target in its national health plan, providing  significant domestic funding, participating in the Global Trachoma  Mapping Project and training surgeons to conduct eye-lid surgeries to  correct the effects of trachoma.
  “Ethiopia is fully committed to  realizing ambitious, yet achievable, elimination targets for trachoma  and other NTDs with proactive program coordination,” said H.E Professor  Yifru Berhan Mitke, Ethiopian Minister of Health. “An increased direct  program financial contribution by the government to NTDs, as high as 3  million USD by 2016, is a big step forward in alleviating the burden and  stigma of these diseases.”
  New Tools and Innovations 
  To  meet control and elimination targets, more research and development is  needed to provide NTD programs with improved tools to prevent, detect  and treat the diseases. Promising new therapies are in the pipeline: A  new three-drug regimen for LF known as triple therapy has the potential  to dramatically accelerate the pace of elimination in affected  countries, and is currently in large-scale safety trials in India.
  R&D organizations such as PATH and partnerships like DNDi and  the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund have catalyzed the  development of better and more cost-effective tools. These innovations,  which include new drugs and rapid diagnostic tests for sleeping sickness  and river blindness, are especially critical in the low-resource  settings most burdened by NTDs. Several new vector control tools are  under development and being piloted to address the growing problem of  diseases transmitted by Aedes mosquitos.
  The Global Partners Meeting on Neglected Tropical Diseases (http://APO.af/oloCnt)  will be hosted by the World Health Organization on 19 April 2017. From  20-22 April, Uniting to Combat NTDs and the global NTD community will  host the NTD Summit (http://APO.af/mEY60y), which will feature technical discussions on the best strategies to reach the NTD control and elimination goals. About Uniting to Combat Neglected Tropical Diseases:
  Established in 2012, Uniting to Combat NTDs (http://UnitingToCombatNTDs.org)  is a group of organizations committed to achieving the WHO's 2020 goal  to control and eliminate 10 NTDs as laid out in in the London  Declaration. By working together, Uniting to Combat NTDs aims to chart a  new course toward health and sustainability among the world's poorest  communities.
  The  10 diseases covered by the London Declaration include onchocerciasis  (river blindness), Guinea worm disease, lymphatic filariasis  (elephantiasis), blinding trachoma, schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted  helminths, leprosy, Chagas disease, visceral leishmaniasis and human  African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness). To find out more about the  work of Uniting to Combat NTDs and to learn more about NTDs, please  visit our website (http://UnitingToCombatNTDs.org).
  About the London Declaration on Neglected Tropical Diseases: 
  The London Declaration on NTDs (http://APO.af/OW0kNB),  launched on 30 January 2012, is a joint commitment to control,  eliminate or eradicate NTDs, signed by WHO, 13 pharmaceutical companies,  donor and endemic country governments, the Bill & Melinda Gates  Foundation and the World Bank. 
 
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