Media
News releases
EPID news
UNC receives Gates Foundation grant to develop drugs for African sleeping sickness and leishmaniasis | UNC receives Gates Foundation grant to develop drugs for African sleeping sickness and leishmaniasis |
| September 14, 2006 | |
|
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has received
a $21.3 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to develop
effective, inexpensive drugs to treat late-stage African sleeping sickness and
visceral leishmaniasis - diseases that infect and kill hundreds of thousands
of people in developing nations.
The grant supports the work of an international consortium led by Dr. Richard Tidwell, a professor in UNC's Schools of Medicine and Pharmacy and principal investigator for the project. "The latest funding by the Gates Foundation provides us a unique opportunity to bring about substantial and lasting therapies for these deadly neglected diseases," Tidwell said. Regina Rabinovich, president of the Gates Foundation's Infectious Disease Program, said, "Dr. Tidwell and his colleagues have already made important progress in developing new tools for these neglected diseases. We hope that their work will inspire other researchers to focus greater attention on these and other overlooked diseases that continue to afflict millions of people in the world's poorest countries." The latest Gates Foundation grant will be used to pursue four specific goals:
UNC has received two previous Gates grants for research on neglected diseases, one in May 2006 for $22.6 million, and another in December 2000 for $15.1 million. The consortium led by Tidwell is conducting a Phase III clinical trial of an oral drug for treating stage one African sleeping sickness with an oral drug called pafuramidine maleate, also known as DB289. If approved, it would be the first new drug for stage one African sleeping sickness in more than 50 years. ![]() Image of a tsetse fly Leishmaniasis is caused by a parasite that can live in people, dogs and rodents. Spread by the bites of tiny sand flies, the disease causes lesions, severe disfigurement and, when the parasites invade internal organs, death. An estimated 12 million people in 88 countries worldwide have the disease, of which approximately 500,000 are internal organ infections. Most cases are reported in developing nations; Sudan and India have been especially hard-hit by a recent outbreak. About the Consortium Meshnick is a professor in the Department of Epidemiology. # # # UNC School of Medicine contact: Stephanie Crayton, (919) 966-2860, scrayton@unch.unc.edu. |
|
| Last updated September 19, 2006 |


