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Approximately $5 million in additional funding from the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT) has been awarded to the lab of Dean Kip Guy at the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy, in partnership with Eisai Pharmaceuticals and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV), for ongoing malaria research.

This award from GHIT funds research over two years with Dean Guy as the project's principal investigator.

Through their collaboration, University of Kentucky, Eisai, and MMV are developing an innovative drug to address malaria: this drug, in combination with one other antimalarial or more, would potentially cure patients and could provide substantial protection after treatment.

“This award from GHIT will continue to support our research, and we’re excited about being able to take this promising drug through the next stages of development,” said Guy. “Despite being an entirely preventable and treatable disease, malaria still places 3.2 billion people at risk and it is still the cause of almost half a million deaths each year. We want to see those numbers fall.”

Fabian Gusovsky, a representative for Eisai noted, “We’re looking forward to the start of the Phase IIa studies which will be conducted by our partners at MMV, and to making an impact where it’s needed. In ongoing studies, the drug has proved to be well tolerated in humans, and we hope further studies will continue to show its efficacy.”

The Phase IIa studies, undertaken in malaria patients, will set the stage for additional testing to determine appropriate combinations of malaria treatments which will ultimately help those hit hardest by this disease, including children and pregnant women.

“We welcome GHIT’s sustained and generous support,” said Dr Joerg Moehrle, Head of Translational Medicine, MMV. “It is critical to the success of this promising research into novel antimalarial compounds. With Eisai and University of Kentucky we have forged an excellent team fully committed to developing next-generation medicines with the ability to counter the growing threat of multi-drug resistant malaria and to save the lives of countless people at risk from this terrible disease.”

Malaria remains a global health problem, and growing resistance to available antimalarial drugs enforces a need to discover next-generation therapies. 

We wish to remember and honor those who inhabited this Commonwealth before the arrival of the Europeans. Briefly occupying these lands were the Osage, Wyndott tribe, and Miami peoples. The Adena and Hopewell peoples, who are recognized by the naming of the time period in which they resided here, were here more permanently. Some of their mounds remain in the Lexington area, including at UK’s Adena Park.

In more recent years, the Cherokee occupied southeast Kentucky, the Yuchi southwest Kentucky, the Chickasaw extreme western Kentucky and the Shawnee central Kentucky including what is now the city of Lexington. The Shawnee left when colonization pushed through the Appalachian Mountains. Lower Shawnee Town ceremonial grounds are still visible in Greenup County.

We honor the first inhabitants who were here, respect their culture, and acknowledge the presence of their descendants who are here today in all walks of life including fellow pharmacists and healthcare professionals.