£10m funding boost to eliminate elephantiasis globally

Press release 3 Dec 2009
18

The Centre for Neglected Tropical Diseases (CNTD) at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has been awarded £10 million by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) to support endemic countries in tackling lymphatic filariasis (LF) – a crippling disease more commonly known as elephantiasis.

The funding builds on earlier successful collaborations against lymphatic filariasis and will support programmes to reduce the prevalence of LF and other related neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) and make progress towards eventual elimination of LF.  The award is part of a £50 million grant announced by the International Development Secretary, Douglas Alexander, to “wipe out deadly tropical diseases”.

Elephantiasis is a parasitic infection that causes acute and chronic illness, disability and disfigurement in 81 countries in Asia-Pacific, Asia and the Americas.  More than a billion people around the globe – 18% of the world’s population – are at risk of contracting the disease.  Forty million have clinical symptoms which are painful, seriously disfiguring and debilitating.  LF prevents people from working and contributes to a vicious cycle of ill health and poverty.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that LF infection can be prevented by treating entire endemic communities once a year with two co-administered anti-parasitic drugs for a minimum of five years.  The impact of the drugs on other NTDs also brings other health benefits such as improved physical development among children and improved maternal and newborn health. The DFID grant will enable CNTD to support 12 countries to administer these drugs to more than one quarter of a billion people at risk of LF in these countries over the next five years.

Professor Moses Bockarie, Director of CNTD, said: “We have a real opportunity here to relegate LF to the history books.  Since the LF elimination programme started a decade ago it has prevented more than seven million newborns from acquiring the disease, which would have resulted in more than two million clinical cases.”

The grant, alongside ongoing joint financial support from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), will also support the activities of the Global Alliance to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis (GAELF), a partnership of public and private sectors working towards LF elimination, and whose Secretariat is hosted at CNTD. GAELF is coordinating efforts with WHO and other disease control programmes and NTD partnerships.

“Tackling multiple infections as a group has allowed us to focus more on the rapid expansion of treatments to millions of people.  Such an integrated, population-based approach also saves time, resources and reduces the burden to locally manage them,” said Lorenzo Savioli, WHO Director of the Department of Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases.

DFID support complements substantial financial inputs for NTDs from the Gates Foundation and USAID, drug donations by GSK and Merck, and technical input by WHO.

‘”The remarkable progress in fighting LF demonstrates what we can do in the field of NTDs,” said Andrew Witty, Chief Executive Officer of GSK.  “Working together, we have a real possibility to eliminate a devastating disease and alleviate human suffering.”

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For further information, please contact:

Alan Hughes 

Communications Manager

Office: +44 (0) 151 705 3308                                      

Email: a.p.hughes@liv.ac.uk

 

Billy Dean

Development Officer

Office: +44 (0)151 705 3272

Email: william.dean@liv.ac.uk 

Notes to Editors

  • Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM) has been engaged in the fight against infectious, debilitating and disabling diseases for more than a hundred years and continues that tradition today with a research portfolio in excess of £130 million and a teaching programme attracting students from over 70 countries.
  • The Department for International Development (DFID) is the part of the UK government that manages Britain's aid to poor countries and works to get rid of extreme poverty. We are led by a cabinet minister, one of the senior ministers in the government. This in itself is a sign of how determined is the UK government to tackle poverty around the world.
  • The Centre for Neglected Tropical Diseases (CNTD) supports national NTD programmes, provides technical assistance to a global initiative, strengthens the evidence base to inform policy makers, and identifies and prioritises interventions that will eliminate filariasis and reduce the burden of other neglected tropical diseases.

For more information please visit www.cntd.org