Currently, there is no antiviral treatment or licensed vaccine against dengue in India
Enrolment of about 10,500 participants in
the phase III clinical trial of the indigenous one-shot Panacea Biotec
developed dengue vaccine, DengiAll, is likely to be completed by October across
20 centres in India, according to ICMR scientists.
So far, 8,000 participants in various centres
at Pune, Chennai, Kolkata, Delhi and Bhubaneswar among others have received
either the vaccine or a placebo as part of the trial sponsored by the Indian
Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and Panacea Biotec.
The trial
is co-led by ICMR-National Institute of Translational Virology and AIDS
research in Pune, National Institute of Epidemiology (NIE), Chennai and
National Institute of Virology, Pune.
Currently, there
is no antiviral treatment or licensed vaccine against dengue in India.
The results
of the Phase-1/2 trial has shown no safety concerns for the one-shot vaccine,
NIE Director Dr Manoj Murhekar said.
“The participants enrolled in the Phase-
III trial will be followed up for two-years. This trial will evaluate the
efficacy of this tetravalent dengue vaccine,” Dr Murhekar said.
The
multi-centre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled phase-III trial was
launched in August last year to evaluate the jab’s efficacy, safety and,
long-term immunogenicity.
The first
participant in this trial was vaccinated at the Pandit Bhagwat Dayal Sharma
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences (PGIMS), Rohtak last year.
The
development of an effective vaccine is complex due to the need to achieve good
efficacy for all four serotypes. The dengue virus has four serotypes, 1-4, with
low cross-protection against each other, meaning individuals can experience
repeated infections, Dr Murhekar said.
In India,
all four serotypes of dengue virus are known to circulate or co-circulate in
many regions.
The Union
Health Ministry in a statement earlier had said that the tetravalent dengue
vaccine strain (TV003/TV005), originally developed by the National Institutes
of Health (NIH), USA, has shown promising results in clinical trials in Brazil.
Panacea
Biotec, one of three Indian companies to receive the strain, is at the most
advanced stage of development. The company has worked extensively on these
strains to develop a full-fledged vaccine formulation and holds a process
patent for this work.
Dengue is
a major public health concern in India, ranking among the top 30 countries with
the highest incidence of the disease.
The
global incidence of dengue has been steadily increasing over the past two
decades, with more than 129 countries reporting dengue viral disease by the end
of 2023, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
In India, approximately 75-80 per cent of infections are asymptomatic, yet these individuals can still transmit the infection through the bite of Aedes mosquitoes.
According
to the government data, around 12,043 dengue cases were reported till March
this year. In 2024, 2.3 lakh cases and 297 deaths had been recorded.
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