Works in Progress Podcast

Malaria is caused not by a virus or bacterium, but by a complex, shape-shifting parasite that has evolved alongside us for millennia. This has made vaccine development a brutal challenge.

In this episode, Jacob and Saloni are joined by Katharine Collins, who co-invented the second malaria vaccine, called R21, during her PhD. They discuss the gruelling process of reverse-engineering a vaccine and eureka moments along the way. They ask whether the biggest barriers to new vaccines are scientific or financial, and what it will take to finally eradicate one of natureʼs most vicious killers.

Hard Drugs is a podcast from Works in Progress about medical innovation presented by Saloni Dattani and Jacob Trefethen.

You can watch or listen on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts.

Saloni’s substack newsletter: https://www.scientificdiscovery.dev/

Jacob’s blog: https://blog.jacobtrefethen.com/ 

Acknowledgements:
  • Aria Babu, editor at Works in Progress
  • Graham Bessellieu, video editor
  • Alice Edwards, captions
  • Abhishaike Mahajan, cover art
  • Atalanta Arden-Miller, art direction
  • David Hackett, composer

Works in Progress & Coefficient Giving 

Thesis
  • Katharine Collins (2014). R21, a novel particle based vaccine for a multi-component approach to malaria vaccination.

Books
  • R. Killick-Kendrick (2012). Rodent Malaria.
  • Michael Kremer and Rachel Glennerster (2004). Strong Medicine: Creating Incentives for Pharmaceutical Research on Neglected Diseases.

Articles and reports

What is Works in Progress Podcast?

Works in Progress is an online magazine devoted to new and underrated ideas about economic growth, scientific progress, and technology. Subscribe to listen to the Works in Progress podcast, plus Hard Drugs by Saloni Dattani and Jacob Trefethen.

I read that if just a single 
parasite makes it to the liver,

it can cause an infection. Is that true?

Yeah, that's right. And I think that's 
the really tough challenge with Malaria.

The reality of this problem is the 
hardness of it is set by nature,

and nature is a vicious test setter.

Adrian asked if I wanted to stay on, this 
was the PhD project that he pitched to me.

I thought it sounded quite interesting to make 
a new vaccine. There was a lot of iteration.

The first time I saw the particles under 
electron microscope that was really exciting.

Would you participate in the challenge trial?

I would love to, but I really 
hate needles. I have to lie down.

Otherwise I might faint. It's kind 
of ironic for a vaccine developer.

There are people like Katharine 
Collins who invent entirely new

vaccines that are now gonna be used 
by millions of children. You may know

one of these people. You may become 
one of these people in the future.

Malaria kills around 600,000 people a 
year. Most of them are young children

in Sub-Saharan Africa. It's caused by 
a parasite, not a bacterium or virus,

and it's spread by a mosquito. Until recently, 
the only control measures were insecticides and a

handful of anti-malarial drugs. But in the last 
few years, we finally got effective vaccines.

Two malaria vaccines have now received WHO 
recommendations and are being rolled out

across Africa. And for the first time ever, 
a human-infecting parasite has a vaccine.

Getting here took longer than it 
should have. The first malaria

vaccine was developed and tested in the nineties,

but it's spent 23 years in clinical trials and 
pilot tests before it was licensed and rolled out.

So in this episode, we're going to cover 
the science of why malaria is so hard to

vaccinate against, how the vaccines 
actually work, why it took so long,

what we can do to speed up the rollout 
now, and what even better vaccines

are being tested now for fewer doses 
and longer durability in the future.

Today's episode is special because 
we're joined by Katharine Collins,

who co-invented the second malaria vaccine during 
her PhD, and she can tell us what it was actually

like from the inside. Welcome to Hard Drugs, 
hosted by me, Saloni Dattani, and Jacob Trefethen.

Okay, so we have some news 
today, right? Because Jacob,

you have started a new job. Could you 
tell us about what you're doing now?

I'm gainfully employed. I'm working at a new 
foundation making grants to science still,

but from a different vantage point. It's the 
OpenAI Foundation and we have been getting

started in science, so it's kind of exciting, 
a little bit different than my previous job

which was at Coefficient Giving. And the 
previous job was quite fun. But you'll have

to ask around what my reputation was there, for 
example, Katharine, what was I like back then?

Jacob, you were the best manager I've ever had.

No no, we can't include that! No, no. 
Expulsion! No, my biggest difficulty

of changing jobs is that I don't get to 
work with some of the wonderful people

I worked back at Coefficient Giving with, like 
Chris Somerville, Ray Kennedy, Heather Youngs,

Rafael Dib, Douglas Chukwu. Oh gosh. So 
many people, Aisling Leow. And guess who?

Katharine Collins. Now the good news is 
that Katharine at least is here today.

So Katharine is joining us from 
Coefficient Giving as well, and is a

very special guest on today's episode because 
she co-invented the second malaria vaccine.

Now we are lucky at Hard Drugs to have listeners 
around the world, and that means I'm going to

start here with some insight into the British 
psyche. For those listening from other places,

we have a guest on today who is an inventor and 
she's also British. That means that she's very

reticent to take credit for things, even things 
she invented, so it took a lot of cajoling to get

her onto this episode, though we knew if we could 
pull it off that our listeners would love it.

So I am very grateful for the willingness of our 
guests to be cajoled, but I should say upfront,

as part of our ability to pull it off, 
that there are many other people involved

in the story of malaria vaccines and of R21 in 
particular, who we won't get to have on today,

who took forward the vaccine into clinical 
trials, who did all the work to make sure

it could get approved and used by kids 
around the world. So that's my proviso,

that's the trade we had to make with our world 
famous inventor. With that in mind, enjoy.

So I have a question for both of you, 
which is, do you have a favorite parasite?

What I didn't realize until recently 
was that fungi and plants can also

be parasites. And so a parasite 
could be a single celled organism.

It could be an animal like a mosquito, 
vampire bats, hookworms. Or it could

be fungi like the ringworm fungi. Or it could 
even be a plant, like mistletoe is a parasite.

What?!

Yeah, mistletoe is a parasite. 
It attaches to other trees and

extracts water and nutrients from them.

Gosh. And here I was. Okay. I think I have two 
answers. You brought up hookworm. Hookworm's

one of my answers, tape worm's another one of 
my answers. I mean, tape tapeworms disgusting,

obviously, but you just have to 
be impressed. They get so large.

How large do they get?

Like, I don't know, probably miles long. Joking.

Wow.

They get feet long for sure. And maybe meters. I 
mean, I just think that's crazy. It's obviously

gross, but luckily hookworms aren't gross 
at all. All they do is hook onto the side

of your gut and suck your blood. They come 
up, they sort of get up through your foot,

sneak - their whole life cycle's insane 
- they eventually get down into your gut

and hook onto it and start sucking your 
blood. I mean, that's pretty impressive.

Is that why they're called hookworms? 
Because they hook onto your gut?

You know, I've never thought of that. And 
the answer is probably yes, but I don't know.

And then are tape worms called 
that because they look like tape?

No, it's actually 'cause on 
the underside, they are sticky.

Oh, wow.

That's a joke. Sorry. That's 
a joke. That's a joke.

Oh, you tricked me!

First trick of the episode!

Okay. My favorite parasite also, well, I'm 
not impressed by this, I'm just so horrified

by it that I have decided it's also my favorite. 
And it's Guinea worm, which is so horrible. And

people ingest the worm larvae when they drink 
contaminated water. And the larvae get into

your stomach, they get through your gut, and 
then they grow into worms that can reach up to

a meter long. And they kind of crawl through your 
connective tissue and your joints, and then slowly

erupt out of your legs - usually out of the skin, 
near your legs. And the emergence is also very

slow. And the way that you remove the worm is 
by slowly winding the worm around a small stick,

and if you go too fast, the worm snaps and dies, 
and that causes severe inflammation in your body.

That sounds like it was invented 
by Jigsaw from the series Saw as

a patient to someone who was impatient or 
something. Okay, well thank you for that.

Wait, wait, wait. The good news is 
though, we've almost eradicated it.

Isn't that great? So it used to cause like a 
million or more cases per year in the 1980s,

and it turns out just cleaning up 
the water, filtering drinking water,

or telling people not to drink from 
stagnant water can help prevent infections.

Do you know how near eradication we are?

I think there were 10 cases 
reported in total last year.

Wow!

Wow. That's incredible.

Yeah, so from millions per year 
to 10. What about you Katharine?

Yeah, mine's really boring. Mine's the malaria

parasite. I can't say anything else 
after studying it for two decades.

Yeah, it would be really surprising 
if you said something else.

Yeah, it would kind of be 
like adultery or something.

In this episode we're going to talk a lot about 
the two malaria vaccines that have been rolled

out. The first one is called RTS,S and it was 
developed in the 1990s. The second was R21,

it was invented by Katharine Collins, who's 
here with us today, and it was based on the

first one. So those are two names that we're 
gonna refer to throughout the episode. RTS,S,

the first malaria vaccine and 
R21, the second malaria vaccine.

I guess it's easy to remember because 
the second one has two in it, R21,

but just in case that is confusing; those are 
the two names that you've gotta remember. RTS,S,

the first malaria vaccine and R21, the second.

Maybe let's start with how you got into 
malaria research in the first place.

What drew you into the field? Or how 
did you get into vaccine research?

I had done my undergraduate and my master's 
degree in basic research and not in global

health. I did various projects in different 
disease areas, but it was really about trying

to understand the fundamentals and different 
signaling pathways and things like that. So I

think one of my projects identified a protein 
interacted with another protein in a pathway.

And while that was cool, and I loved science 
and it's definitely where I'm supposed to be,

but it I didn't see how that was gonna have 
any direct impact on health in the near term.

I actually started looking for jobs, or how 
I could have an impact in global health,

or how I could transition from science into global 
health work, and it wasn't really clear. And then

this job was advertised at Oxford University to 
work on malaria vaccine trials. And I thought,

wow, that's global health. I should just take 
that job, and or apply for that job, and that

may open doors. And so I did. And I really loved 
working on malaria. It was instantly something I

was really passionate about, really motivated 
to work on. It's just a fascinating parasite.

So the job was a research assistant 
on malaria vaccine trials. So the

Jenner institute at Oxford, where 
Adrian Hill's group that I joined,

they were testing a number of different 
candidates in malaria trials. And my job

was to help coordinate those trials and to 
do all the immunology in the background.

And then how did that turn 
into inventing a new vaccine?

Yes. Well, after being there for about a 
year, Adrian asked if I wanted to stay on,

and do a PhD. The project idea was that 
Adrian had developed a vaccine that targeted

the malaria parasites, whilst they were in 
the liver. It'd been shown to protect some

people against infection, but it was quite 
a low level, I think it was 20% efficacy. So

the idea was to combine this liver stage 
vaccine for the vaccine that could also

prevent the malaria parasites before they get 
to the liver. So stop them invading the liver.

And the leading vaccine at that time targeted 
the parasites before they invaded the liver,

and this was a circumsporozoite based vaccine 
called RTS,S, and it was developed by GSK.

So he wanted me to work on making a newer 
version, an updated version of that vaccine.

That's so cool. I feel like compared to - so 
my PhD was very boring in comparison to this,

and it makes me think that there's actually -

Wait, Saloni, did you not 
invent a vaccine in your PhD?

I know, I feel like people should know upfront 
that some PhDs are better than others. You know,

some fields are better than others. So 
who else was involved in this? Did you

have mentors, collaborators, rivals, or enemies?

I worked fairly alone in the lab. I did have 
a few people that were supporting the work as

well. So my PhD supervisors were Adrian Hill 
and Sarah Gilbert. There were also a couple

of postdocs and technicians and PhD students that 
helped me with various parts of the project over

the years. For example, someone actually 
helped me vaccinate all the mice that we

used for the preclinical experiments. 
And then I did the immunology myself.

And Sarah Gilbert is the inventor of 
the AstraZeneca vaccine, is that right?

That's right. Yeah.

For COVID. Got it.

Yeah.

And rivals?

Rivals, well, oh, you're asking the good 
questions. I guess in the field at the time,

there were lots of people trying to 
develop a malaria vaccine. I guess

there was competition between the different 
groups to see who would get there first.

And whilst I was working on it, 
RTS,S hadn't crossed the finish line,

but it was obviously way, way, way further 
ahead in development. So the expectation

was that that vaccine would move forward and 
get approved first, and then R21 may follow.

Right. And by that point, had 
the RTS,S patent already expired?

Yes, actually that's right. 
So if I remember correctly,

it was due to come off patent. And 
interestingly, that was essentially

the starting place for learning how to 
make R21. So I reviewed that patent,

I looked at how they've made RTS,S, and then 
I made a plan for how to go about making R21.

Did that have enough information 
for like? What was that like?

So RTS,S is actually made with a lot of a 
protein on the surface of the Hep B virus.

This is the Hep B surface antigen and that was 
needed to make it form the virus like particle,

but it had quite an excess of Hep B 
surface antigen. So it's actually a

really good Hep B vaccine, and not a terribly 
good malaria vaccine. So my project was to see

if we could remove some of that Hep B and 
actually make it a better malaria vaccine.

And we had established a plan for how we're 
going to get there. So initially we wanted

to just replicate the RTS,S process in the lab and 
then try a few different things to see if we could

get the particle to form without this excess Hep 
B surface antigen. One approach was actually to

just try and chop out some of the malaria protein 
out of the vaccine and remove some of the T-cell

epitopes, which were in there, and a few other 
bits as well, and see if the smaller protein would

be more able to form particles on its own. The 
other way was just to try and reduce the amount

of extra Hep B that we were adding and see if it 
could form particles on its own that way, by using

some of these newer yeast expression technologies 
to grow the protein and new methods to purify.

I think RTS,S had something like a 12 step 
purification process at least in the patent, and

that might not be what they used anymore. But I 
wasn't really interested in trying to set up this

12 step new process in an academic lab. You know, 
I'm not a biochemist. So I essentially looked at

their process to understand what they had done 
and why, and then developed a purification

process using a combination of some of those 
old methods and some of the newer technologies.

I feel like my immediate question is why 
didn't the developers of the RTS,S vaccine

do that? Like if there were various 
steps that didn't need to be included.

Yeah, I mean, they probably did. I mean, when 
they first patented what they were doing,

it probably had this multi-step process. 
Maybe they had different process they were

using lots of different methods, so 
they patented the whole process and

I'm sure they probably optimized that as they 
scaled up and improved their manufacturing.

I wanna just get a more of a sense of what it 
feels like to be in the lab alone, toying with

different steps of purification, and how long were 
you - did you feel sort of lost versus actually,

it worked pretty quickly and you got, once you 
saw in the electron microscope, you're like,

oh God, it's actually gonna work. Was that 
pretty quick or you were there for months,

years? You're tinkering. What did 
the invention process feel like?

Actually, I think I was interviewed 
by someone a while ago and I,

my recollection is that it was very quick 
that I kind of give it a go and it worked.

Wow.

And then I thought, now I thought, is this true? 
And I went back to my lab notebooks and I had a

look through like the electronic notebooks and I 
had a look through and it wasn't that quick. There

was a lot of iteration, a lot of optimization 
that happened with every single stage.

So we were using yeast to express 
the protein and grow the protein,

and there were four different strains we were 
testing, and then for each different strain, we

picked multiple different colonies, and I screened 
all of these different colonies first to find the

best expressing colonies, and then I started to 
try and purify it, to purify them. And I probably

used multiple different techniques until I got 
something that looked substantial. So it wasn't

that quick. So I think it was a long time ago 
now, so my memory's a bit optimistic maybe?

So am I imagining right that it's like, you 
have the instructions-ish from the patent

and then you're trying out different options, 
like different versions of the yeast, different

versions of the purification process, and at 
each step trying to optimize which is the best

one to go forward with or something like that? 
Or is that not the right way to think about it?

Yeah, that's just about right. There are a lot 
of newer technologies available for purifying

proteins and particles, so it's kind of a 
process of looking at which steps could be

replaced by newer technologies and going for 
something that was more modern and simpler,

where that was possible, and where 
there wasn't a newer technology,

we were sticking with that whole process as well.

So you were at the Jenner 
Institute, is that right?

That's right.

Do they have just people working on 
many different diseases and like trying

to develop vaccines against all of them, or 
are there some areas that they focus on? Or,

are lots of people doing this during their PhD?

I think developing a vaccine was rare, fairly 
novel at the time, or quite rare. So not a huge

number of people were doing it. There were 
three PhDs I can remember that developed

a vaccine during their PhD and I was one of 
them, but there may have been others as well.

But in terms of the structure at the Jenner 
Institute, there were different group leaders,

or PIs, that have their focus area, and 
the Jenner Institute was generally open

to having new people join the institute. And 
if there was space, they did actually join

the physical lab space as well. So we had work 
going on on multiple diseases at the same time.

Okay. So you're, you're tinkering, 
you're tinkering, you're tinkering,

you look under the electron microscope 
and then you test something in mice and it

protects them from malaria. Did it feel like 
a eureka moment at any points of that step,

or was it just iteration? Iteration, feels 
good, feels a bit better, feels a bit better?

No, definitely a few eureka moments. I mean,

the first time I saw the particles under the 
electron microscope, that was really exciting,

especially when I had used the process that we 
didn't think that was possible. So by removing

all the excess Hep B, that was really cool when 
we could see those, and they looked very similar

to the Hep B particles. So it was it was really 
reassuring that we were doing something right.

Then the next push was to move 
that into a preclinical study,

to inject mice and see if we get an immune 
response, and then if we can protect the

mice as well. And whilst I was optimizing the 
process, the yield was really, really low of

the particles. And I tried to concentrate it 
and it wasn't easy to concentrate. So we ended

up injecting an incredibly low dose into the 
mice and it was like, well, we might as well,

we have the product, let's just see what it 
does. And then it protected all the mice.

And so that was really exciting. We had 
gone for this dose that was dramatically

lower than any other dose we normally test 
in the lab. And the vaccine I think 10 times

lower than any other dose that had showed 
for RTS,S being tested in mice and that it

worked. So that was really exciting. That was 
the one of the really exciting moments. Yeah.

That's super cool because 
if you have a lower dose,

you can vaccinate more people 
with the same amount, right?

Yeah, exactly. And a tenfold lower dose, that's 
huge. That's not half the doubling the number

of people. That's a dramatic increase. But 
actually at the time there wasn't a lot of

information on how well dose in mice would 
translate to humans and if it would actually

result in a lower dose human vaccine. We did 
later find out that it was easier to scale up.

So, interesting how the practical constraints - 
let's say it had been effective but you would've

needed five times more product. Is it possible 
you would've just dropped this lead and focused

on something else 'cause you couldn't 
make enough, or what would've happened?

No, I was really early on in the purification 
process, in optimizing that. So it was just that,

it was just of luck. But we had 
gone in with such a low dose to

begin with. Maybe we would never have 
got to the low dose, that lower dose,

if we haven't had that constraint 
on the concentration of the product.

Okay. So all of this is happening in your 
PhD, was that 2010 to 2014? Is that right?

Yeah, well remembered!

So we now know, with the benefit of 
hindsight, that R21 works in kids,

in humans, and it protects babies against 
malaria. And that took time to prove out

any clinical trials, and there was 
- to give a spoiler to the audience,

the R21 vaccine was actually approved 
a couple years ago for wide use.

Along that journey, you finished your 
PhD and you started doing other malaria

research elsewhere. Did you, when you finished 
your PhD in 2014, did you have a feeling that,

oh, I just invented a vaccine that's gonna 
get used by millions of people? Or did it

feel more like, okay, I've proven out that 
this might work and I'm gonna pass it on,

but it's, we'll see. Yeah. What did it feel like?

I think most people in the field were quite 
skeptical about R21 in the early days. They

couldn't really see the point in making 
a vaccine that was so similar to RTS,S.

And the initial results, kind of backed 
that up, that there was reasons for that

skepticism. It didn't look very different in 
the preclinical work, in the mice studies,

there wasn't a really strong reason to 
think that this was gonna save a lot

of lives, when there was already 
a vaccine that was very similar.

But the dosing was very different, right?

It was, and I think this is a lesson for 
vaccine developers, right? At the time,

everybody was quite negative about R21. But if you 
think about things like being able to reduce dose,

making it simpler and easier to manufacture, 
even small increases in immunogenicity,

if you add all of those benefits together, 
you end up with a product that's easier to

deploy, a lot cheaper, and maybe easier to 
manufacture. So it can really have an impact,

without just making a dramatically 
better vaccine in terms of efficacy.

It's sort of scary though, 'cause I think I, as 
a outsider who has never developed a vaccine,

if I had seen the results from preclinical 
tests in animals and the results said, well,

we can't distinguish that this is better from 
RTS,S, I probably would've killed it. And yet

now we know that it is much cheaper to produce 
and it's more manufacturable and it's longer

durability. I mean, so it's sort of terrifying. 
What was in the system that allowed this one to

actually go forward and now it's reaching people. 
You know, is it as contingent as it sounds to me?

Yeah. You know, I think this was - all the credit 
goes to Adrian Hill for pushing it forward and

really finding out what it could do in people, 
right? I think so many people would've dropped

the vaccine at this point. And another difference 
that we haven't mentioned so far is that R21 also

used a more scalable adjuvant, and I think that's 
quite important for the supply argument as well.

An adjuvant is another ingredient in the 
vaccine that strengthens its immune response?

Yeah. Yeah, absolutely.

Alright, and so these were 
different between the two vaccines,

and the R21 adjuvant was cheaper 
to produce and easier to scale up.

Yes, absolutely. Yeah. The adjuvant used 
with the, with RTS,S is a GSK adjuvant. It's

also used in another product, and yeah, much more 
difficult to scale, and much more limited supply.

I remember reading that it comes 
from - that adjuvant comes from the

tree bark of a South American tree. Is that right?

Yeah. And that comes from the bark of 
a Chilean - I can never get the name,

pronounce the name right, is a Quillaja 
tree (Quillaja saponaria, soapbark).

Does that mean that you have to get that tree to 
get the adjuvant? Is that why it's difficult to

scale up? And how come the second one is easier 
to scale up if they're both from these trees?

So the supply limitation is the availability 
of the trees, the raw material, and also the

purification process. So if you imagine you're 
purifying all these products from the bark of

the tree, or from the tree, and if you purify and 
throw away a lot - a lot of it away, it's gonna

be more expensive and harder to scale. They've 
improved the ways they're producing the trees,

so supply is increasing and it's gonna 
be less of a limitation moving forward.

And people are also working on 
synthetic versions and special,

not sure the right word, aquaculture style 
(hydroponics) growing of these, of these trees

and different methods of harvesting 
from them to get the components.

Is it like someone shaving parts of 
a tree off and then doing some other,

like, how does this all work?

I've never seen anybody do it that, and that's 
kind of how I imagined it, taking the bark off.

But other thing I should mention is you have 
to like harvest most of the tree or you have

to kill the tree and that was the problem, and 
so I think they've changed the way that they

actually harvest from the tree so they can 
keep growing as well in some instances. So

you don't just have to - it takes 25 years 
to get the tree and then you cut it down.

So you're looking at your lab notes, Katharine?

Yeah, it's fascinating. I'm glad I kept 
really good notes. It's really interesting.

Are they dated?

Yeah.

What date are you looking at?

Um, troubleshooting the purification 
process, 23rd of the third, 2011.

Whoa.

Wow. What were we doing in 2011?

Yeah, 23rd of the third.

I was in school.

I was inventing vaccines, actually, Saloni.

You didn't tell me that.

Yeah, I try to keep it private.

So what happened on that day?

I tested a few different methods and then 
the result: aggregation seen in sample.

Okay. Bad.

Second purification attempt: reduce aggregation.

I love it.

Do you have any, um... random comments in there? 
Do people put in computerized doodles? Emoticons?

No. Definitely not, emojis 
didn't exist then, Saloni!

No, but emoticons did.

LOL.

XD

Aggregated again, LOL. Wait,

so how many experiments are you doing? Is 
this like every day you have new entries?

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Wow.

No, every couple of days. So I guess 
I'm gonna test this and then it

takes a few days to test and then... 
results: aggregation seen in sample.

ROFL. Are there images of the RTS,S or R21 under 
the microscope? Should we- we should include one.

Well if you are up for it - us including 
some screenshots might be kind of fun for

viewers. Oh my gosh, no. Sorry. We have 
thank goodness. We have to include this.

Wow.

This is so cool. Whoa. Okay, great.

Wow. They're so cute.

Okay, listeners, so we are looking at 
two images here. On the left it looks

like spots on someone's skin, maybe measles. 
So talk us through the left here. Katharine,

what are we looking at? 
Those beautiful circles. Wow.

So those, that's a transmission electron 
micrograph of negatively stained R21 particles.

Oh my gosh, that's so clear. They're 
so clean. They're so circular.

They're so blobby.

I mean, just to restate some of, and 
correct me if this is wrong, Katharine,

but part of the reason why having these circles 
that look like viruses is so useful is that

our immune system is really good at attacking 
circular viruses. So is that a fair statement?

Uh, yeah. So they're easier to 
recognize by the immune response,

definitely. That's part of the 
theory behind virus type particles.

What reading this has just really made me realize 
how much I was reinventing the wheel. Like if this

was anybody else making it, or company making 
it, you'd have had an expert in purification

diving into this that would've been able 
to, I had to do all the research myself.

Oh my gosh. Wow.

Yeah. And figuring it out.

That's so cool!

Yeah, that's even cooler.

You know I did have support. There were other 
people in the lab that I'd go to for advice,

and I talked to Sarah and Adrian, but 
I was often figuring it out by myself,

or at least that's how I remember it.

It's astonishing because I tend to, sometimes 
I feel myself getting skeptical about patents

in particular, where the trade that 
society is making with inventors is

that if you publish in public how you 
did something, then we will give you

exclusivity for 20 years to do whatever 
what you want. Sometimes I'm like, well,

hold on. How much are you actually gonna be able 
to learn from reading that? They're probably

gonna hide whatever they can and to get away 
with it. And what, how can you learn something

from reading? You need to see someone do it, but 
you're telling me you literally read the patents

and then you just kept plugging away until 
you've simplified and fixed all of the stuff.

I mean, that's awesome. That's 
a one person show. And I'm like,

wow. So knowledge in public 
is a extremely big deal.

Yeah. I think I managed to get it to the 
point that we could make it ensure that

it works. And then there was a huge amount of 
work that happened by others to turn it into a

GMP grade process. And even then that was a 
simplified or a shortcut version to get to a

GMP product that was done by the clinical 
biomanufacturing facility in Oxford. They

did an enormous amount of work to produce the 
first batch and then Serum got involved and

they used all of their knowledge and knowhow 
to probably dramatically change the process.

So I wanna pause on that actually, 'cause it's my 
day job is I'm a funder and then now your day job

is, you're a funder, Katharine. And one thing 
that comes out from this story that's really

interesting is that a lot of universities where a 
lot of knowledge is generated and science is done,

do not have facilities to produce the vaccines 
that you could take into humans safely,

whereas Oxford does. Is that a fair 
statement? And do you think that

that allows for a knowledge generation 
loop, which is unusually productive?

Yeah, absolutely. I think that's definitely one 
of the big advantages of being in the Jenner

Institute. Adrian had set up this clinical 
biomanufacturing facility and that meant

he could really quickly iterate, he could design 
something in the lab with a student designing it,

and then transfer it to the manufacturing 
facility and quickly produce a small batch.

Does that mean we should have more 
Jenner Institutes doing other - can

you scale that to work on more diseases 
or is it just really hard to do that?

No, no, I think that's the way 
- people should be learning from

that model. I think it's not cheap 
to maintain a facility like that.

I have another question, which 
is, why is it called R21?

Uh...

Is that a very complicated story?

Um.. I can't remember.

What?!

Wow!

Adrian came up with a name and I think 
I remember asking him, and I think he

said it was a 21st century version of a repeat 
region vaccine. The repeat region is the part

of the CSP protein that's included in RTS,S and 
R21, and that's what the R stands for in RTS,S.

Well, maybe you should ask him.

Yes, right now.

Alexander, why is it called penicillin? God, 
I just can't remember. I can't remember.

I've got an answer.

Oh, we have an answer.

So Adrian said it's the 21st century 
presentation of the CSP repeat vaccine.

So your earlier answer was basically correct.

Yeah.

That's great. It's so funny to me that 
you thought that you had made it up,

but you actually remembered it correctly.

I have a similar but very different story 
where I thought that my earliest memory ever

was made up for a while and then I found 
video evidence of it being true. So my,

so my earliest ever memory is of us, my 
family, going to the Grand Canyon and at

the Grand Canyon I had a pink balloon and the 
only thing I remember is that I had this pink

balloon and I dropped it down the Grand Canyon. 
And I remember mentioning this to a bunch of

people afterwards and then eventually I was 
like, did that actually even happen at all?

Like that just sounds like such a crazy 
story. Like why would I drop a balloon,

that doesn't sound like me? Like I was two, but it 
still doesn't sound like me. I wouldn't do that.

And then last year I found a video that my 
dad took of this whole trip that we took to

the US when I was two. And in the video there's 
a segment where I'm holding the balloon, the pink

balloon. And in the background, you can hear my 
dad telling me to drop it down the Grand Canyon.

That is pretty much a clincher.

I was like, wow. I finally feel so 
validated. But also it wasn't me. I didn't,

I wouldn't, I was just listening to my dad.

There's a lot to unpack there.

I was like, why would I litter?

Oh... Right?

That's not like me at all!

It's all adding up now.

Before we move on to the science of malaria,

what happened after you invented the R21 vaccine 
and what happened after you finished your PhD?

Yeah, so after the vaccine was made, we then 
first tested it in a mouse model of malaria,

and we showed that we could 
protect the mice against malaria,

and this worked best when you used the right 
adjuvant. And I did a large number of studies

in mice to really look at the dose that was 
needed, and that's really where my PhD ended.

So once I developed the vaccine and we had shown 
that it worked in mice, Adrian was moving this

forward into clinical trials. So I had the 
opportunity to stay at Oxford and continue

working on the vaccine as it moved into the 
human clinical trials. But I'd finished my PhD,

so I decided I wanted to move on and broaden 
my experience and learn some new skills.

I moved to work with James McCarthy in Brisbane 
and he had set up a model where you could infect

people with malaria - this was a challenge trial 
- and evaluate the efficacy of drugs. And so

I was working there on those studies and also 
developed a new challenge model as well. I then

moved on to work in - on projects in the field, 
understanding malaria transmission more fully,

and looking at interventions to 
interrupt malaria transmission.

That work was mainly based in Burkina Faso and 
it was based out of a lab in the Netherlands.

Hmm. And then how did you get 
from there to Coefficient?

Jacob hired me.

Oh, wow!

No, I mean, it's an interesting story. 
I wasn't particularly looking to leave

academia. I was loving the work I was doing, 
but obviously Coefficient Giving, or Open

Philanthropy at the time, is a really exciting 
funding organization that's quite innovative.

And what happened to the vaccine after that?

So Adrian then took the vaccine forward into 
clinical trials and there were lots of other

people involved in the development of the 
vaccine. All the investigators in Africa,

the clinical investigators in Oxford, and 
also the Serum Institute who licensed the

vaccine from Adrian and from Oxford, 
and worked with the team there to carry

out the phase three trials and then 
obviously develop the final product.

I think it's sort of underappreciated just 
how many people work on these, like actually

getting the testing and scaling up to people. 
It takes so many people and it makes me think

also that it's not just about funding, it's also 
the number of people working on things like this.

Yeah, I mean, absolutely. I think this large 
number of people it takes is really important

for me. I just played a very small role at 
the beginning and there's such an enormous

number of people that made this vaccine get to the 
finish line and have the impact it's gonna have.

I think it's time to get into the science of 
malaria. But before we move on, I'll just,

my reflection on this segment, is there gonna 
be a lot of people listening who - basically

science nerds - who sometimes it may feel like 
the big things left to do in science while they're

all behind us. That's why Saloni and Jacob talk 
about Gaston Ramon. You know, we've already had

all these antibiotics invented. Oh, well and so, 
wouldn't it have been cool to live back then and.

I think that's entirely the wrong orientation. 
You know, there are people like Katharine Collins,

who in 2010 to 2014, invent entirely new 
vaccines that are now gonna be used by millions

of children. And yet, and she is right here. We 
got to talk to her right now. And you can too!

You can work on important problems and there 
are many people who can benefit! And it's just,

it's almost scary how sensitive to 
particular scientists at particular

times a lot of this stuff is, 
and it's very inspiring too.

So, Katharine, thank you so much for joining us.

Great to be here.

All right, so how come it took so 
long to develop a malaria vaccine?

And why are malaria vaccines so much harder to 
develop than vaccines against other diseases?

Malaria is caused by a parasite, which is 
quite different to a bacteria or a virus,

it's a lot more complex. And the malaria 
parasite actually moves- it has a really

complicated lifecycle, and it moves 
through at least three different stages.

So it's first injected into the body by the 
mosquito, and then travels from your skin into the

liver. It develops in the liver for about seven 
days and then bursts out into your red blood cells

in your bloodstream and it invades your red blood 
cells. The symptoms are caused by the parasites

invading your red blood cells and then destroying 
them, and then it does this many times. Each cycle

it produces many more parasites and so it invades 
many more red blood cells and that's what causes

the anemia. And then the parasites within the 
red blood cell, those infected red blood cells,

can adhere to different tissues and that can 
cause problems for different organs as well.

I read that if just a single 
parasite makes it to the liver,

it can cause an infection. Is that true?

Yeah, that's right. And that, I think that's the 
really tough challenge with malaria, but you know,

you can get hundreds or thousands of sporozoites 
from one bite. But I think you - we don't think

it's many thousands, and you could have some 
immunity that gets rid of a lot of those,

but just one has to get through the defenses, and 
that gets into the liver, and then in the liver

they actually replicate so that it doesn't stay as 
one parasite. It turns into many, many merozoites,

and they then burst out of the liver cell and 
start invading blood cells. By the time you

get to the blood, you've got many parasites again, 
and very quickly, they replicate and produce more.

That makes me think, both of the 
vaccines are - the efficacy is much

lower than many other vaccines. 
But if I think about it this way,

that they're trying to prevent even just 
one parasite from getting to the liver,

then from that perspective, it sounds like they're 
actually really effective at doing that, at least.

Yeah. Yeah, it's a very high bar. Exactly. Yeah.

Well, that's terrifying. Just one parasite. 
So all of that makes it much harder than,

let's say, measles or flu, 
which are caused by viruses

and where the vaccines are produced 
by killing or attenuating the virus.

So there are many reasons that it's difficult 
to make a vaccine against malaria parasites.

First is this really complex life cycle 
and then also the malaria parasite has

been around since Egyptian times. So it's 
evolved to evolve with the human immune

system for a really long time, it's learnt 
how to evade our immune responses really

well. So every time our immune system is 
managed to attack the malaria parasite,

or find a good way to get rid of it, it's then 
evolved another mechanism to keep surviving.

There are lots and lots of redundant 
proteins in the parasites. So you think

you can block something that's important 
and then it just switches on a different

protein instead and uses that. That's been 
one of the reasons it's been quite tricky.

So the malaria parasite has a very 
complicated lifecycle. Does it,

when it goes through these different stages, 
does it also change shape? What actually happens?

Yeah, it looks completely different at each stage. 
It starts with what we call a sporozoite that

looks like a little eyelash when you look 
under the microscope, it's a curve shape.

Then when it invades the red blood cell, it's 
called a merozoite; it's like a round, almost

cone shape. But not only does it look different, 
but it has different proteins on the surface. So

a vaccine that works against one stage isn't 
necessarily gonna work against another stage.

Right. And that's one thing that's 
hard about developing a vaccine. Like,

how do you pick which protein 
to use in the vaccine?

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. You know, the approach 
is normally to look for a protein that's really

important. So you find out something that's 
probably something that's involved for an invasion

or adhesion. So people would look at knocking 
out different proteins and seeing whether they're

critical for development. If you find something 
that's essential, then that's also gonna be a

good target. And the other way is that people 
look for what's most abundant on the parasite,

or the pathogen in general, but that can often be 
a decoy. That's an interesting one. Like sometimes

the things that were abundant on the surface 
are there to misdirect the immune response.

Okay. So you're taking these samples 
from mice and you're learning a lot,

it sounds like, from mice. So firstly, 
thank you to our mouse brethren. And Saloni,

I know that you have written a lot about, 
in one of my favorite pieces that I read

two years ago was about the invention of the 
malaria vaccine. And you wrote about how mice

were originally domesticated in some sense, to 
be models for malaria. So how did that work?

It starts out before mice, I think there were 
some animal models in the late 19th century,

the first animal models for malaria were birds. 
And the way that scientists proved that malaria

was spread by mosquitoes, was by using sparrows 
and infecting them with the blood of an infected

human, and seeing whether it would transmit. 
And I think it seemed like there were some,

there were a bunch of different birds that 
could get infected by malaria, but they just

didn't translate that well to what would happen 
in humans? So people tried developing drugs,

like testing new drugs, in bird malaria, and they 
seemed to work there, but in humans they didn't;

they caused various side effects. And so 
they were trying to find different models.

There are also two other types of 
models used in between. One was monkeys;

monkeys are really expensive and difficult 
to work with. And then the other was humans,

right? Because in the 1920s, if I remember 
right, humans were used as a model to study

malaria because people with syphilis could 
be treated by infecting them with malaria,

because the bacteria doesn't survive after 
the fevers that are caused by malaria.

It's a bit like solving your aching thumb 
by chopping it off to me, but, okay.

Would you rather get syphilis or malaria?

Ah, the eternal question. And my answer is 
I'm glad that we're in the 21st century.

Syphilis seems like it was 
really scary before antibiotics.

Yeah.

Especially if you got neurosyphilis.

Yeah. The bacteria would worm its way up into 
your brain and stick around for years or decades.

I've been to a medical museum in 
London called the Hunterian Museum,

and they have exhibits of people 
who had syphilis at the time,

and their skulls are filled with holes 
from the infection. It's very scary.

Well, that's a wonderful tangent, 
but I was wondering about,

I was wondering if we could talk more about mice.

Right. Okay, so mice, so we have the bird models 
that aren't great. You have the monkey models that

are really expensive, and the human models, which 
once you could treat syphilis with antibiotics,

there was no longer an audience of people 
who were interested in being infected with

malaria deliberately. So the next 
question was, let's try to find a

different animal model. Let's try to find 
a rodent that can be infected by malaria.

And I think it took quite a while to find any 
rodents that were infected by malaria. There

were two researchers that finally figured it out. 
I think they were two Belgian researchers who

were in the Congo, and they were doing tests 
to see which animals mosquitoes had bitten,

and that ruled out various animals nearby and 
it didn't rule out rodents. So they thought

maybe there's something here, and they continued 
trying to look for rodents that were infected by

malaria. And eventually they found a thicket rat 
(Grammomys dolichurus) that was infected with it.

This thicket rat was infected by a different 
strain of malaria called Plasmodium berghei,

and that seems to be much more - like that's just 
much easier to work with. I think at first, they

also, they couldn't replicate the whole lifecycle 
of the parasite in those thicket rats, because

there were certain stages of the parasite's 
lifecycle that needed a cooler temperature.

So when I was reading about this, it seemed like 
it took 16 years for them to work that out. It was

several things. So the original research was just 
post World War II and then in the 1950s, various

countries did large-scale malaria elimination 
programs and cut down on malaria research.

And so all the people who were working on that 
stopped working on, or many of them did, stopped

working on it, and then only then got interested 
again in it during the Vietnam War. So I think it

was like partly that and partly just, historical 
contingency of which parasite they discovered. And

did they look at their own lab notes from 16 years 
ago to see what the temperatures were in that

forest where they found the first malaria infected 
rats. Goes to show how important lab notes are.

Sounds like mice can tell you something, and took

a long time to get to a model that worked in 
the lab. But they can't tell you everything,

'cause mice aren't humans, and 
they might mislead you sometimes.

A mouse has never told me anything.

Speak for yourself. Well, I mean, 
that brings me onto a question I have,

which is: are mice enough? 
If not, what's the next step?

Well, so you could use non-human primates, but 
they aren't the perfect model for malaria. There's

only one that gets infected, that could 
be affected with human malaria parasites,

and so none of the models are perfect. So people 
don't often do a lot of non-human primate work,

but they can be used to answer specific questions. 
So then your next model is obviously humans.

Mm-hmm.

And that makes sense because if you 
want to make a vaccine for humans,

you probably wanna test it on humans.

Okay. So we're segueing to humans. How did that 
begin? What were the first experiments in humans?

So the first ones were the ones that were 
treatments for syphilis in the 1910s to

forties. And then when penicillin was developed, 
it wasn't necessary anymore. But then, after that,

there were various experiments in prisoners in 
different parts of the US, I think. And what was

interesting to me when I was reading about this 
was that - so the prisoners were volunteering for

these experiments, but some of the prisoners were 
not just subjects in the experiments. Some of them

were actually technicians and researchers, 
who helped in the experiments as well.

And one of the most famous ones is Nathan 
Leopold. Do you know, do you recognize that name?

Not me.

So he was a - I know this because of a film that 
was inspired by his life. He was a murderer who

murdered a friend, I think, a classmate of his. 
So with a friend of his, they both kidnapped and

murdered one of their classmates while they 
were students at the University of Chicago.

And while they were serving their sentences,

Nathan Leopold, one of them, enrolled in one of 
the malaria research studies. And after that,

he then became a technician, he started doing - 
like he was actually operating research as well.

And the reason that I know this is because that 
story inspired the Alfred Hitchcock film Rope,

if you've seen that. Have you seen that?

I have not seen that.

It's a very good movie where, I mean, it's the 
same-ish story. They've kind of changed what

actually happened. But in the film, these two 
students decide to kidnap and kill one of their

classmates for fun, essentially. And then they 
store him in a, what is it called? Like a box in

their apartment. And they then host a party just 
hours after this murder, to basically show the

fact that they could get away with it. And the 
whole film was taken in 10 shots, like 10 long

segments that are just stitched together. And it's 
an incredible film. Like very, very well made.

Wow. Okay, so...

So how does this relate to malaria? 
Many prisoners would've been part

of this malaria research in the mid 
20th century, and they contributed

to our understanding of various parts 
of the transmission process, I think.

And since then, we've continued studying malaria 
in humans in a type of study called a challenge

trial, where you deliberately infect volunteers 
with mosquitoes with malaria. So I think in the

past it was many mosquitoes per person and 
now it's just five bites. Is that right?

Yeah. I guess there was work to improve and 
standardize the modern challenge trials.

That's where they landed on five mosquito bites 
that could reproducible infect the volunteers.

So what happens in one of these experiments 
do you sit with. Do you put your hand into

a jar that's filled with mosquitoes 
or what? What's the what's it like?

No, the process is quite dull, actually. I guess 
you normally have to travel to somewhere where

there's a facility. And because these sort 
of things do contain mosquitoes infected with

malaria, they're usually under high containment, 
so then the volunteers need to pass into a

contained containment area, and then a cup is 
often passed through a window into that room

and they have a cup - it's like a coffee cup - 
and it has gauze on the top and the mosquitoes

will be inside. The lid will all be taped shut 
so they can't escape, and then you place your arm

on top of the cup and allow the five mosquitoes 
to bite you and say, a few minutes for feeding.

And then they'll have a look and see how 
many of those mosquitoes have fed on you.

So what they do is they take the cup 
of mosquitoes, they then look at them,

each mosquito individually under the microscope. 
You can see whether it's blood fed, because it's

got blood in its abdomen, in its belly. Then if 
it's got blood in the belly, then look at the

salivary glands and check that it had sporozoites 
in the salivary glands. And so you're looking,

five mosquitoes in that cup that fed. But so 
they count up how many did feed, then they'll

put more mosquitoes in a cup. So if you only 
need one more infected bite, they'll put one more

mosquito in, and then you can be bitten by that 
mosquito. If that one doesn't bite you, then they

take that one out, put another one in 
until you've had five infected bites.

Oh, I see. That's probably the most 
disgusting coffee cup I've heard of.

Not so tasty. These, these days, are the 
people who are putting their arms out,

are they mostly undergrads somewhere 
or, yeah, what, who are the volunteers?

I think it depends where you do the trials. I 
think in Oxford it's typically lots of students,

but other people as well. But you, the students 
are often quite willing to get involved.

Legends.

I saw a picture where it wasn't a coffee 
cup, but it was a cup noodle box container.

Yeah or soup. And they're often called, used as 
soup cups. They're like, or ice cream containers,

they're that kind of large, larger size that 
would be used. That's usually used to hold

a lot more mosquitoes. It would've 
been a different study, probably.

Oh, I see.

So you, in those challenge models, you 
are giving some of the students or other

volunteers injections of vaccine, some of 
them placebo, and then they're getting bitten.

Exactly. That's right. Yeah.

Okay. And then what do you, how do you figure out

the truth afterwards? You're just 
seeing which one of them faint, or?

Once you've been challenged, you start following 
them up a couple of days later. So the parasites

will be in the liver for seven days. You 
don't have to monitor them too carefully

in the beginning, but you still monitor them and 
check the parasites haven't got into the liver,

into the blood from the liver. And 
then you are monitoring quite closely

from liver emergence. So once the parasites are 
entering the blood or you're expecting them to,

you can see them once or twice a day, 
up to twice a day, take their blood.

You can look under the microscope for 
the parasites, see if they've got the

parasites in their blood, and you can 
also do molecular diagnostics as well,

like PCR to look - it's a much more 
sensitive method. So you can detect

the parasites in the blood before they will 
make the people sick. And so you can treat

them quite quickly and then you'll know which 
volunteers have been protected and which haven't.

That's very cool. And then now there are 
methods that are beyond mosquito bites.

People directly inject volunteers 
with the parasite, is that right?

Yeah, there's a couple of models. So 
the other models you would inject either

cryopreserved sporozoites, that's that 
first stage that goes into the liver.

You can inject those intravenously, you 
can ship those anywhere in the world to

do that type of study. The other model 
is injecting blood stage parasites. So

both of these are greats and they 
can answer different questions.

And these two vaccines, the RTS,S and 
R21, are for the first stage. So you'd

want to be able to test it against the 
natural infection with the mosquito bite.

Yeah, definitely.

Saloni, I've got a question for you.

Oh, what's the question?

Would you have volunteered for one 
of these human challenge trials?

I was thinking about this back when you asked 
who was volunteering in the studies because as

I have described in the first episode we did, 
I once volunteered for an HIV vaccine trial,

phase one trial. And I enjoyed 
it and I think I probably would.

I think the difficulty is that back when 
I did that, I was a student and I was very

bored and I didn't have anything to do in my 
free time anyway and I didn't have a social

life. And now I have a lot of stuff going on 
in my life, like I just have a lot of work.

By the way... congratulations.

Thank you.

Me, I'm still alone, but I'll get there.

But I was thinking like, there are lots 
of different types of diseases that you

might do a challenge trial for, right? 
Like you could do one for rhinovirus or

like flu or cholera or I don't know, 
what else is there - Shigella maybe,

or something like that. And all of these 
sound very unappetizing to me. Like,

I wouldn't wanna do a challenge trial for any 
of those. Like the flu, the respiratory ones,

I'm like, that's just boring and someone else 
is gonna do them anyway. Probably the, that's -

Amazing. I'm not gonna do that one. 
It's boring. I want something harder!

Right. And then the other, 
like cholera and shigella,

I mean, diarrhea... I don't want, that 
sounds horrible. And also I feel like

I'm quite small and if I lose too much 
weight, there'll be none of me left,

and so I can't do that one. So what I would 
do is a more dangerous pathogen, I think.

Okay, nice. Is malaria dangerous enough for you?

That would make it worth it. I think so, yeah.

Okay. Even though malaria -

Even though it's treatable and stuff.

It's treatable. Yeah. I mean, just in case 
listeners are thinking about it themselves

and concerned; in the diarrhea ones, they 
do treat you. They don't just leave you,

they give you antibiotics. But yeah, 
those in order to get more of a signal,

they don't treat you in, within an 
hour, they'll probably you within 12

hours or something. So it's a - it's not, you 
gotta go through some pain to get the gain.

Well, I read that with the cholera vaccine 
challenge trials some people... actually,

you know what? I'm not gonna finish that sentence.

Oh -

It was about how much diarrhea 
they had. And you know what? I

don't actually wanna give people that image.

That's.. you know what, Saloni? 
I think they've got it now.

So my question for malaria, Katharine, how 
sick do you get? Do you get sick at all or

do you get treated as soon as there's any risk 
of sickness or? What if you're in, what happens?

I guess the idea is that they treat you before 
you develop any real symptoms. So you probably

start to feel a bit fluey. You may get a headache, 
but because they're monitoring your parasitemia

so closely, the plan is to treat you before 
you get any really uncomfortable symptoms. By

the time you get treatment, you could have 
some symptoms. I think people do typically

get symptoms. They feel rough for a day or 
two, but that's hopefully the extent of it.

I think that's kind of cool. Yeah, I 
would do it. I mean, I haven't done it,

so you always have to take with a grain of 
salt, whatever I say now. The issue, yeah,

I tried to volunteer for a trial recently and 
ended up getting swamped in the logistics. So

your point Saloni, that it's harder once you 
have a job? I've had that experience too.

It also depends where you live, whether there are 
trials around you that are convenient that you can

participate in. So it comes down to those aspects 
as much as anything. But malaria sounds kind of

fun. If you get, the drugs are great. You get, 
if you get feel a little bit sick, that will make

me feel like I've done something for humanity and 
then I get treated, I'm up for that. Sounds good.

And also you get to live in a cool 
quarantine hotel for a bit. No?

No, because -

No?

It's safe to walk outside. In England, right? 
There's no, there's no mosquitoes that bite you.

So you are infected and then they're just like,

go on with your life. Yeah. And 
you just feel sick at home instead?

Yeah. They give you a little card to 
put in your wallet, which tells people

what you have and what you need to be 
treated with in case something happens.

Oh, really?

Okay. I'm not volunteering for this thing.

Emergencies, like if you ended up in hospital 
from a car crash or something, they would know

that they should probably give you 
antimalarials now. The study's over.

No, I thought, I thought you'd be in 
a little quarantine hotel. I thought

it was like a mini vacation but you're sick.

No, I think maybe they do it differently 
in different places. So it depends maybe

what type of trial you are in. So for the drug 
trials with malaria, because they actually let

you develop parasitemia to a certain level, 
then they treat you. And then they want to

measure the clearance rate of the parasites. 
So they want to sample you quite quickly and

frequently after treatment. So for those, they 
do often do inpatient for your convenience,

then they let you go once you are treated, 
so it could be just a couple of days.

I think I'm thinking of the respiratory 
virus challenge trials where, because

you could transmit it to someone 
else, they keep you in a facility.

Diarrhea as well, for the shigella one they 
keep you in. Yeah. I realized Katharine in

that description though, one of the other 
reasons why people might not want to do it,

which is you're getting pinpricked constantly 
'cause people are taking a lot of blood samples.

So that's if you wanna get over needle 
phobia via exposure therapy, go for it!

I feel like the way to - Exposure 
therapy is supposed to give you

like a mild version where it's like, 
oh, nothing actually happens when you

get injections. This seems like 
it would actually scare you more!

Well, I did exposure therapy and nearly died.

Would you participate in the challenge trial?

I would love to, but I really hate needles.

Oh, there we go! There we go!

It's kind of ironic for a vaccine developer.

That's so funny.

I'm terrified of getting vaccines. When 
I have, when I go to get a vaccine,

I have to lie down to have a vaccine, I 
have to lie down with the blood taken,

as otherwise I might faint. I think I have 
fainted in the past, that's the problem.

Oh, wow.

And so, as you mentioned we take blood in these 
challenge trials, 10 to 15 times depending on

when you get malaria. So I just couldn't, 
I couldn't cope with that. Unfortunately.

We must know our limits. Okay. So how come 
that's not enough? Or is it enough? So

let's say you've taken a malaria vaccine through 
human challenge trials. You ready to license it,

roll it out across different countries or 
not? I know the answer, but I'm curious.

Well, obviously no, I guess that's not the target 
population. So you still need to find out if your

vaccine's gonna work in the people that it's 
intended for, which would be children in Africa.

Well, we have some vaccines 
that are approved just from

challenge trials. Right? Like the typhoid vaccine.

Yeah, that's right. Yeah, I think when the 
trial isn't feasible to be done in the target

population, there's good arguments to try and 
get that efficacy signal from a challenge trial,

and then they still need to get 
your safety data from the target

population that you're gonna 
use the vaccine in as well.

Okay. So we've talked about the second 
malaria vaccine, and we are talking about

the animal models and the human challenge 
models for vaccines in general. Saloni,

since you've written about the history of malaria, 
I'd love to hear, if you're willing, what was

the first malaria vaccine development timeline 
like? What were the steps there? What happened?

I love how we've gone through this backwards, like 
we're doing the Star Wars prequels or something.

But more entertaining.

Well, I guess it's a long story. So I think I 
probably wanna start with a quick summary of

the whole development. I first got interested in 
this topic when I was reading about the news of

the malaria vaccine being rolled out in 2021, 
and I wanted to write a blog post about it.

So I was starting to write this blog post, and one 
of the first things that I learned was that it was

actually developed in the '90s. And it really 
kind of shocked me and I was just thinking:

what went wrong? Like, what happened? Why 
was it, why it didn't only get released now,

if it was developed so long ago? And 
a lot of my interest just stemmed from

that curiosity and frustration, with 
how things could have taken so long.

The short version is that I think a lot of it 
is because of a lack of funding, infrastructure,

and in some cases, also the regulatory changes 
and standards that there were. But I think the

broader version is really, you know, this malaria 
vaccine essentially came out of research from the

US Army. In the 1950s, almost every country 
was affected by malaria, and they used, there

were large scale malaria eradication programs in 
the 1950s, mostly using insecticides like DDT.

And those were very effective, like a lot of high

income countries eliminated malaria in the 
1950s with DDT and other control efforts.

And funding also declined, so there was no more 
reason for a lot of high income countries to do

research on malaria, and a lot of the researchers 
who were previously doing it became operators and

managers of this eradication program. So funding 
for research and development massively contracted,

and that kind of stayed that way until really 
the 1960s, when the Vietnam War was happening,

and the US Army was then once again facing 
malaria in Southeast Asia. But by then it was

kind of drug resistant malaria. So there was 
once again, this need for research trying to

develop new drugs that were effective against drug 
resistant malaria, but also potentially vaccines.

And so some researchers started working on 
this program to try to develop a malaria

vaccine. And their names were Ruth Nussenzweig, 
Jerome Vanderberg and some of their colleagues.

And what they did was, they first tried to 
build a proof of concept of the vaccine,

so let's see if you can protect mice by 
infecting them first with a killed version

of the parasite. If you protect them with this 
killed version of the parasite, will they then

be protected from another infection? And what 
they found was that yes, you could do that.

And, this eventually much later led to a different 
type of vaccine, which we might come back to later

on, but it's not really scalable. So the other 
option is let's try to develop a subunit vaccine.

From our previous episode on a history of vaccines 
and Hepatitis B, basically the idea here is that,

instead of using the whole organism, the whole 
parasite as a vaccine, let's try to find a few

components, or maybe the one component, that 
is enough to stimulate an immune response.

And so that's what they tried to find and 
they sort of looked at these mice that they

were protecting with this killed parasite and saw: 
what are they generating antibodies against? What

is their immune response reacting against? 
And they found that that clustered around a

protein called the circumsporozoite protein. 
That protein, it turned out, was gonna be a

very good candidate for a vaccine. That was 
gonna be the main component of the vaccine.

So the initial attempts were to use that protein 
as the vaccine. If you remember back from our

protein subunit vaccines episode, the Hepatitis 
B one, often just using a single protein in a

vaccine is not very effective. And the reason for 
that is that, often when you have a whole pathogen

being a vaccine, or when you're exposed to a 
whole pathogen, there are many things about that

pathogen that can stimulate your immune response. 
Whereas when it's just one protein from that,

that's often not enough for your immune system 
to recognize that this is something that we need

to react to. There are obviously lots of nuances 
there, but that's kind of the simplified version.

So this initial vaccine, just using that 
one circumsporozoite, or CSP, protein,

was not very effective. They only managed to 
protect one volunteer out of six in their first

study. The way that you improve that, is often 
by adding an adjuvant. So an adjuvant boosts the

immune response in some way, and so that's kind of 
what they tried. They tried different adjuvants,

they tried different formulations, and 
eventually they created this formulation.

And I forget what each of the letters 
stands for. And this, the formulation

was the RTS,S vaccine. And so Katharine, 
what does, what is this formulation made of?

So the formulation is made of parts of the 
malaria parasite and the Hep B virus. So

the R stands for the repeat region, which is 
from the CS protein in the malaria parasite.

The T is for the T cell epitopes 
that are from the same protein,

and the S is from the Hep B surface antigen, 
and this is fused to that malaria protein.

Then there's the excess Hep B surface antigen 
I mentioned before that was needed for this to

form a virus-like particle, and that's 
the extra S so that makes the RTS,S.

Unfortunately, by the '90s, there was no 
longer interest in funding it from Vietnam War

era army research anymore, and they couldn't 
scale up and continue that research. So they

only found this adjuvant, that they ended 
up using, in the nineties. So at that point,

we have a possibly more effective vaccine 
and they did another challenge trial to

see how effective that would be. 
This time it was more effective,

it was six out of seven people in the challenge 
trial that were protected from further infections.

And again, this, a seven person study 
sounds extremely small and it is,

but that was one - this is a preliminary, pilot 
type of study, so this isn't really the real deal,

but it is still much better than 
any other study had shown so far.

So this was a much more promising 
candidate for further research.

So what they did next was to do a field trial with 
many more participants. So they ran a field trial

in The Gambia with 300 men, they vaccinated 
them with this candidate and with a placebo,

and they looked at their rates of malaria 
infection afterwards. And in the group

that received the vaccine, they had a 34% 
lower rate of malaria infections over the

next four months. So that was the first 
field trial, and that was done in 1998.

And okay, this field trial looks not amazingly 
effective, but still effective in a way that

no other vaccine candidate had been up to 
that point. And so the next step was really,

let's try to get this into real, clinical trials 
in the population that needs these vaccine,

which are children. So they started with trials 
in older children, who were 6 to 11 years old,

and then younger children, who were 1 to 4 
years old, and then finally infants. This

idea is called age deescalation. Basically you're 
testing it first in children who are least likely

to be affected by potential side effects, and 
then the infant group who are more vulnerable.

You sort of wanna make sure that it works first in 
adults, and then in children, and then in infants.

But this process took a long time and they 
struggled to find funding at every stage

of the process from what I read, and also needed 
to themselves set up clinical trial sites across

Africa. Often there were just not clinics 
with the expertise to run clinical trials,

or the equipment to do testing and things 
like that, and the researchers themselves

had to fund some of that work, so it was a 
very long process. And then it eventually

finished in 2015, the phase three trials 
ended at that point. That is, I think,

much longer than the research process 
that we often have for vaccines today.

Though, luckily, I'm sure that 
meant it got approved in 2015.

No!

No. What happened then?

What happened then? Well, in 2015, the phase 
three results came in and the European Medicines

Agency said, this looks safe and effective, but 
the World Health Organization didn't recommend

it for a large scale rollout. They asked for 
more pilot studies before they would do that.

And one of the reasons for that was that there 
were some, in post hoc analyses of the data,

they found higher rates of meningitis in 
older children and higher rates of death

in girls at two of the trial sites. And the World 
Health Organization, if I understand correctly,

didn't think that they were - those signs 
were causally related to the vaccine,

but they wanted it to be ruled out, 
and so they asked for pilot studies.

The pilot studies took around four years to 
find funding for, and to get staffing for,

and they finally launched in 2019. And then 
another two years into the pilot studies,

there was enough data for the Data Safety 
Monitoring Board to look at the data, find no

increased risk of these side effects, and then 
finally clear the vaccine for the World Health

Organization's endorsement in October, 2021. So 
that is 23 years after the first field trials.

The safety was one of the reasons, 
but that wasn't the only reason,

right? They, there was a lack of 
confidence in how effective the

vaccine was. So it wasn't the risk, it was 
about the risk benefit analysis. You know,

it was only 36% effective in those phase 
three trials, and there was the safety signal.

The RTS,S vaccine was going up for EMA and WHO 
review in 2014, 2015. That was just about when

you were finishing your PhD, working on the R21 
vaccine. Katharine, so what was the feeling like

in the malaria research community at that time? 
Did people have conflicting and different views,

and there was a lot of debate? Was there 
consensus and surprise? What, what was it like?

I think everybody was really hopeful that the 
vaccine would get approved. I think there was

definitely mixed opinions in the field 
about whether a vaccine that showed such

low efficacy in the phase three trial should 
be rolled out and would actually be effective.

So I think what was really important and really 
key was the cost effectiveness modeling that was

done with the data. And I think that was quite 
pivotal. And in that it really showed that

even a poorly effective vaccine or suboptimal 
vaccine, most vaccines that have been used in

children at the time had really high levels of 
efficacy, like 80, 90%. So it was a completely

uncharted territory. But the modeling showed that 
even with this low level of efficacy, because

there's so much malaria, it could have quite 
dramatic impact and it would be cost effective.

I think that was a bit of a surprise to everybody. 
We've been aiming for this really high bar,

and then all of a sudden there was this 
realization actually a quite a suboptimal

tool could make a big difference. I think 
that was quite unfortunate and quite pivotal.

So what did it feel like when the WHO verdict 
came in that more studies were needed?

I think it was really disappointing. I think 
it's a difficult decision that they had to

make. This is really uncharted territory; a 
vaccine with really poor efficacy and this

safety signal. So it's a tough call for 
them to make, but I think people at the

time and now still think there could have been 
a better way to resolve the safety signal issue.

And had they prepared better for understanding 
the public health impact of a vaccine that has

this level of efficacy, maybe that messaging 
could have been different when they were

trying to make the recommendations, if they 
understood the potential value more fully,

maybe that would've have shifted the approach 
away from a pilot implementation program that

took six years to conclude versus doing 
a much more rapid safety assessment.

I guess I also, I feel like it's a little 
bit surprising just because even the first

field trials in 1997 and 1998 also showed 
fairly low efficacy, but they continued

working on it and people probably should 
have been prepared by that point that,

hey, this even though this isn't a very highly 
effective vaccine, it probably will save a lot

of lives. And so it's surprising that that wasn't 
enough to not require another study after that.

Yeah, I think you're right, and what I've 
said just now is my recollection of the

events at the time. This is a while ago and 
I wasn't deeply involved in the process,

so perhaps there was more preparation than 
that I was aware of, but it feels like that

was the missing piece that people didn't 
truly, at least the people I was talking to,

didn't truly appreciate the potential impact, 
global health impact, of this tool at the time.

And there were other consequences as 
well to delaying the rollout. So you'll

see GSK would be hoping that at the end of 
their phase three trial, they can scale up

manufacture and start delivering the vaccine. 
They probably had a factory that was making it,

but now there was gonna be this huge delay. 
What were they gonna do with the facilities

that were producing the vaccine? And then what 
was that gonna mean for vaccine supply later

on? All these knock on effects as well that in 
hindsight it's easy to think differently about

what we could have done differently. But I'm not 
sure it was so easy at the time, to be honest.

It's also just like to state the 
obvious, so strange and messed up

that the way that things currently work is 
that to get a scalable regulatory opinion,

you end up relying on the EU and the WHO when, 
you know, over time we have to get to a world

where kids in Ghana rely on regulators in Ghana, 
not these kind of more distant bodies. 'Cause

you could totally imagine, as happened with 
the next vaccine, R21, that some nations want

to go ahead with vaccination campaigns, 
even if the WHO doesn't agree and they

absolutely should. So that's another part 
of this story that's a bit heart wrenching.

I feel like there's also a part of this 
that's like what safety standards we're

used to here might be different. Like the 
cost benefit just might be very different

and the willingness to take vaccine at 
an earlier stage might be different.

But I think there's also another thing that 
kind of drew out the process, which was a

lack of funding and a lack of infrastructure 
for clinical trials at the time. So especially

in the early 2000s, there were very few trial 
sites in Africa where you could actually try to

do research on the malaria vaccine at all. And 
it was only in the 2000s when malaria funding

actually grew from various organizations like 
the President's Malaria Initiative in the US,

and Unitaid and the PATH's Malaria Vaccine 
Initiative that was funded by the Gates

Foundation and the Global Fund. And all of 
these appeared only in the mid-, early-2000s.

Until then, it would've been really difficult, 
I think, to get enough funding to set up these

trial sites and to actually do the research. To 
me, when I think about it seems like mostly a

failure of infrastructure and funding. And 
there are also these regulatory concerns,

but if we'd had that sooner, we would've been 
able to test many other vaccines as well.

Yeah, I agree with that. I think that's 
a really important point. I think,

we take it for granted now that 
actually these clinical trial

facilities are so well established, and 
the investigators there are so competent,

that they can run their own trials, lead 
their own work. That wasn't the case.

I remember the stories of the people 
leading the RTS,S work doing the draw

of the sites that existed at the time, 
and injecting cash into a lot of these

sites to bring them up to the standards that 
would be needed for their product development

needs. So I think a lot of that work 
done by GSK has really benefited the rest

of the malaria community and other 
development of other vaccines as well.

Okay. So there's infrastructure, which is 
key, and also funding, as you mentioned,

Saloni. So let's say that there had been a 
big burst of funding back then that was even

bigger than we saw. How would that have 
happened? Were there people proposing it?

There were people proposing it, but they 
were proposing a different type of funding.

Much of the funding that we're talking 
about is sort of directed at specific

groups to do the research, or to set up 
the trial sites, and things like that.

But in 2004, some economists, Michael Kremer 
and Rachel Glennerster proposed an Advanced

Market Commitment, which is a different type 
of funding model to try to spur innovation

and change the commercial incentives for 
vaccine development. So the general idea,

of why did we need philanthropy and like foreign 
aid and all of these global health programs,

is that there isn't otherwise a commercial 
incentive to develop vaccines where it's very

small. The reason for that is that the people who 
are most affected by malaria are very poor and you

can't really sell vaccines at a high price 
because they wouldn't be able to afford it.

So here the idea is, what if we could change those 
commercial incentives? And the Advanced Market

Commitment is a way of doing that. So instead of 
directing funding at specific research groups,

it's actually a pool of funding that is only 
available to researchers or to manufacturers

if they develop a successful vaccine in 
trials and they reach certain criteria.

So Rachel Glennerster and Michael 
Kremer proposed this Advanced Market

Commitment where they said we should have a 
commitment for around $3.2 billion in total,

where you would pay per person who was 
vaccinated, for the first 200 million people,

and you would pay about $13 per person. What this 
does is it actually incentivizes companies to

develop a vaccine and take it to the finish 
line. Both invent-, both developing it and

then also scaling it up because they're only 
gonna get that payout per person they immunize.

So I think that is a really cool model that 
spurs commercial development and it's very

different from the type of funding that was 
actually done. But the problem was that that

idea didn't actually get taken up. And there 
were various reasons for that. One was that

at the time people thought the malaria vaccine 
was just too technically difficult. It was too

far away to be reality. So they didn't want to 
use this new funding model that was proposed,

for something that might not ever happen, and 
they thought that you, we have to have a lot

more basic R&D before we'd have a product that 
could reach that standard. That also just made it

more politically risky. People were like, well, 
we want something that will definitely or has a

much higher chance of success. We want a proof 
of concept that this funding model could work.

And the other problem is that it's hard, in 
a commitment like that, which is essentially

this legal document that funders, in this 
case they would be countries - governments,

or philanthropists agreeing to pay out a 
vaccine that meets these standards. It's

hard to decide what those standards are and what 
kinds of products would fit those criteria if you

don't have a malaria vaccine yet, and you don't 
have like things that are late in the pipeline.

So instead of doing an Advanced Market Commitment 
for malaria, there was a different Advanced Market

Commitment that was actually implemented, and that 
was for the pneumococcal vaccine. And so in 2009,

various countries and the Gates Foundation came 
together to fund an Advanced Market Commitment to

develop a new pneumococcal vaccine that would 
target the strains that were common in Africa

and South Asia. Those strains were not included in 
the previous pneumococcal vaccines, but there was

already a proof of concept that we have this, we 
have these other pneumococcal vaccines, it should

be fairly easy to turn to make new ones against 
these strains. And it worked. So there were three

companies, I think, that quickly developed these 
pneumococcal vaccines, took them through phase

three trials and then manufactured them in 
bulk to get that payout from the commitment.

I personally think it feels like 
a very big missed opportunity to

use it for malaria as well. But many 
people disagreed with that at the time.

Okay. Katharine, you were around. Do 
you think it would've worked back then?

I'm not sure. I think the 
limitations were scientific,

biological, we had the 
problems with the adjuvants,

we had lack of trial infrastructure. I'm not 
sure it would've made things go much faster.

Well, it's hard to say as well, because this 
was proposed in 2004. And so at that point,

the RTS,S vaccine already existed and it already 
had like an efficacy of 30 something percent. And

so if you were at the time, and you were trying 
to put this commitment together and you said,

we'll fund a vaccine that reaches these 
standards, probably you would, the standards

that you would ask a vaccine to be developed 
for would be higher than the 30% I think.

So I think in that sense it would've been 
hard. What's interesting though is that

there was another paper in 2005 where 
they tried to model this explicitly,

so trying to model the cost-effectiveness under 
different estimates of the efficacy. Like if

it was 30%, how would it be cost effective? If 
it was 60%, et cetera? And this was a paper by

also Rachel Glennerster, Michael Kremer, 
many other economists, Heidi Williams,

and they found basically that it was, it 
would still be cost effective to fund an

Advanced Market Commitment for a malaria 
vaccine, even if the efficacy was only 30%.

So I think to some degree there had been a bunch 
of thinking on this, but at the same time, I don't

think we know what the counterfactual is because 
I don't think that other, there are enough other

commercial companies that are developing malaria 
vaccines now that we can compare this to. Like

the thing that is effective about the Advanced 
Market Commitment is that it gets people to enter

the market that wouldn't otherwise. And so it's 
hard to know how that could have gone, I think.

I think that's the bit that I agree with 
that there weren't other people that

were that far advanced in their vaccine. The 
only thing that has worked to date is a CSP

based vaccine. There were people working on other 
types of vaccines at the time. But it's not sure,

because it's not clear any of those would've made 
it either, or looked promising enough to advance.

So that's a pull funding mechanism incentive 
to get to the finish line. Katharine,

did it feel like more grant money, and more 
universities, and more companies wherever,

would have made the difference if there 
was a hundred million more every year

going into malaria vaccines? Or 
did it feel like the science and

the infrastructure - you can't rush that, and 
you actually just have to do it step by step?

That's a very good question and, 
actually I, maybe I'm gonna change

my opinion slightly and that there were 
other, with more funding available,

there were other people doing great science at 
the time. So Simon Draper at the University of

Oxford has developed a blood stage vaccine with 
RH5, and that work was happening at the same

time on the lab bench next to me, when I was 
doing R21. But that was seriously underfunded,

so there was - people had to prioritize what 
they were gonna support with their funding,

there was limited funding. So the focus went on 
to CSP based vaccines and that's what the Gates

Foundation funded the RTS,S vaccine through MVI 
and the Gates Foundation didn't fund blood stage.

There was only one funder at the time that was 
supporting that work, or one main funder, and that

was USAID (United States Agency for International 
Development). Had there been more money, that work

could have been accelerated. And you know, that's 
shown now in a phase two trial that it gives good

levels of efficacy, not as high as R21 and RTS,S, 
but there's potential to combine that with R21.

So that work could have been accelerated a lot 
quicker, had there been more funding around.

So just playing that out. So that, 
that result you just referenced,

that was from about a year ago, was it? That 
was pretty recent. Right? Yeah. And so if that

funding had happened a decade earlier, could 
that result have come about a decade earlier,

do you think? Or is - that's 
just a funding question really.

Yeah, I think the product was the one 
they were working on in the beginning.

No!!
Depressing.

Wow. That is incredibly depressing.

I know, but I think credit has to go to Simon 
Draper and the funders that supported him and

Lorraine Soisson at USAID, they kept that 
work going with quite limited budgets,

and they've made it to the finish 
line, well, not to the finish line,

but to the clinical trials 
now, and the efficacy trials.

Wow, geez.

Thank you Simon. Thank you Lorraine, for 
believing against consensus and keeping it going.

I have a question related to this because 
both these are different stages of the

vaccine and so I'm wondering if you had a 
vaccine that combines the vaccines against

both of these different stages, would you 
expect that to have a higher efficacy,

and have people tried to do things like that?

Yeah, I think that was the original approach 
from Adrian, when I was making R21. He also

had a liver stage vaccine. The other vaccine he 
had developed was the ME-TRAP vaccine (Multiple

Epitope–Thrombospondin-Related Adhesion Protein), 
and that targeted the infected hepatocytes.

His theory was that if you could reduce the 
number of sporozoites that get to the liver,

then the liver stage vaccine would have an easier 
time finding and clearing out those liver cells.

And that was valua - that was tested and it didn't 
work, so that was a great theory that didn't work.

Now people are looking at combining the CSP based 
vaccines with the blood stage vaccines that Simon

Draper's developed and others. There are lots of 
other people working on blood stage vaccines now

as well. But the preclinical models are really 
difficult to evaluate all stages of the parasites

in the same model and the combination of those 
vaccines. So we really have to get into humans,

and that's the work that Simon and Angela 
and his team are working on at the moment.

Wow. And so that was also - could that 
have also been sped up by 10 years?

Yeah, that vaccine that they're now putting 
into clinical trials with R21 was being

developed at the same time as I was developing 
R21. So I know that could have gone quicker.

This is crazy.

It wasn't exactly hard to spot, it was right next 
to you on the lab next to you. I'm gonna cry.

Geez.

I mean, so as someone who works in philanthropic 
funding, I think the main lesson here is just

that funding in global health R&D is 
so tight that you have to make these

prioritization decisions that are vicious and 
impossible. So we just - I mean, a more sane

society would have more long-term government and 
philanthropic funding that was less correlated,

more decision makers, more money total, 
so that you could get more shots on goal.

So I think, for anyone listening who 
is wondering what the solution is,

I think that's the most obvious general solution 
staring us in the face, and so I don't wanna hide

it. There's obviously all these specifics 
we can get into that are more technical,

but that one is just - is obvious. So 
we just have to say it out loud. Sorry!

Geez.

No, I agree with that. I don't disagree with 
the decisions that were made about what you

had to prioritize at the time. I think 
they were tough decisions that people had

to make. That had there been more money, 
we could have moved things a lot faster.

I feel like what's even more depressing 
about this is that... Despite all of that,

malaria is still one of the more well-funded 
diseases in global health world, and there

are various others that are large burdens 
and get tiny fractions of the funding.

I am wondering if we could just talk about the 
two vaccines already approved next to each other,

and then what's coming next after these two? What 
needs to be done next in the invention pipeline?

So RTS,S versus R21. I will tee this off by saying 
I don't know that there's - there are different

comparisons you could make, but one fact just to 
state upfront is that neither has faced a rollout

where tens of millions of children have received 
the vaccine, so perhaps the biggest problem is

simply that there is not enough reach of either 
of them, let alone comparing between the two.

That said, what do we know 
about the data that has come in,

about how they look? So there's 
more data coming in every year,

but what do we know so far about efficacy, 
about safety, and other factors? Katharine?

The headline efficacy figures from the phase 
three trials look quite different for the two

vaccines. So RTS,S, we mentioned it was something 
like 36% an efficacy overall. And actually for

the population that was used for the phase 
three trials for R21, that was most similar,

the efficacy I think was 57% overall. And then for 
R21, the phase three result was something around

75%. I can't remember the same, the exact numbers, 
so this looks like R21 may be a lot better.

But there's some nuance and detail 
about how these trials were conducted,

and where they were conducted, and when they were 
conducted, that means we can't - we probably can't

directly compare these trial results. So I don't 
think you can claim that R21 definitely has a

higher level of efficacy. There were different 
things happening at the time; different other

malaria interventions that were being used, 
like bed nets, or seasonal chemo-prevention

drugs that were given to children every year, 
so those results aren't directly comparable.

So I think we have to try not to make that 
comparison unless we run a head-to-head trial.

What I think is interesting about the R21 data 
that's starting to emerge is that it does - it

may be more durable than RTS,S. So the decline of 
protection seems to be slightly slower. So it may,

even if the efficacy isn't much different, 
that peak protection they gets the,

it may last a little bit longer, so 
that could make quite a big difference.

I see. So, but in both cases, your first shot,

you'll probably get it at five months old. Is 
that about right? And then you might get another,

the ideal is you get one at five, one 
at six, one at seven months. And you're

saying that the immune response from R21 is 
lasting for longer after those first shots?

That's right. That's actually a fourth 
dose that's given around 18 months.

I think my takeaway from the difference 
between the two is mostly the manufacturing

and the cost. Is that also how you see 
it? And are there any other differences?

Why is there such a huge difference 
in the cost of both of these? And is

that because of the dosing that 
we talked about at the start?

I guess, the other big difference is of 
the scalability of the vaccines. R21,

it seems to be easier and cheaper to produce 
and that may be in part due to the lower dose

and maybe also new technologies that have been 
used to produce the vaccine itself - so newer

yeast expression systems and things like that. And 
also, the adjuvant that's added to the vaccine.

As we mentioned earlier, that the adjuvant 
was really important for the RTS,S vaccine.

We found the same with R21, only when we used 
a certain adjuvant did we see protection. And

that the adjuvant that's been chosen for R21 
was Matrix-M and that doesn't have the same

supply limitations as AS01, and it's slightly 
cheaper as well. So that makes it more scalable.

Yeah, I mean it's funny, it's not the property 
you'd think about first – scalability,

and how that might have implications for cost 
and price. But last price that I saw for RTS,S

was about €9 a dose and there are four doses. And 
then the last price I saw for R21 was the original

price was 3.90 and it maybe has come down to 
$3? So we're, we're talking about a 3X, say,

difference, which may not sound like much, but 
is decisive in a lot of these cost-effectiveness

calculations because global health funding, 
there's just not so much of it going around.

So when you think of cost-effectiveness, it's 
not just how effective are these vaccines,

it's how much it cost to actually deliver 
them to the kids who need them. So anything

you can do to bring the numbers down 
is, it could change the equation.

Yeah. And just going back to the delivery schedule 
you mentioned earlier Jacob, which is giving doses

of the vaccine at five, six, and seven months. 
And then there's this booster dose or final dose

that's given around a year later, and none of 
these time points are actually aligned with

the schedule for other infant vaccines. So what 
this means in reality is that children and their

parents and caregivers have to travel for each 
of these visits at another time. And what we're

finding is that people are not showing up for all 
of their doses of vaccine, and so if they're not

getting the full course, it's gonna reduce 
the effectiveness of both of these vaccines.

Right. If you have to travel three months 
in a row, but you are busy taking care of

your other kids or you're at work, or, I 
mean, it's, you can see how you might miss

a dose. And then if that happens, then 
whatever we saw in the clinical trial

may not reflect the reality of what kids are 
getting protected, so more work to do there.

Okay. So those are two 
vaccines and they're imperfect,

but they are helpful for kids. Do you 
think they're good enough, Katharine?

If we did this again today, 
could we make better vaccines?

Uh, yeah, I think well, oh gosh. 
Wow. That's a tough one. I think...

I mean, scientifically, not in terms of the 
funding or trials or anything like that.

Yeah, I think we have better techniques 
and technologies for developing

vaccines. Structured-guided design, reverse 
vaccinology, computational protein design,

things that you've talked about in your 
previous podcast episodes, where we really

try and understand more specifically what type 
of immune response you want to generate. So you

can take the whole protein that you think is 
important, and show that to the immune system,

but it might generate a mixture of 
helpful responses and unhelpful responses.

So using these more sophisticated techniques, 
we can try and understand which parts are really

helpful, and design the proteins or the 
antigens to really elicit those responses

more carefully and more specifically. So using 
those techniques, people are already doing this.

They're working on trying to make better 
CSP vaccines, better blood stage vaccines,

and also vaccines that target the 
transmission blocking stage as well.

But why were you hesitant before?

It's not clear that any of those will actually 
be any better. So I think there was a really

interesting paper published by the Protein Design 
Institute by Neil King, someone that we support

and think is an incredible institute for using 
computational design to really improve vaccine

antigens. And they tried to make better versions 
of R21, and I can't remember what the paper showed

exactly now, but there were many candidates 
they assessed and they used this incredible

methodology to try and improve the vaccines, but 
none of them looked substantially better than R21.

What do you think of the whole sporozoite 
vaccines where scientists were just

irradiating the whole parasite at the 
early stage and injecting that as a

whole? I think they were doing that 
in the '70s, and that seems like in

that research it was pretty effective and 
some people are continuing to work on it.

Yeah, absolutely. I think those are some 
of the first data that really stimulated

the vaccine development community. They 
showed really early on, decades ago,

that you could protect people by using these 
irradiated sporozoites, and that work continued.

So a company called Sanaria, with Steve Hoffman 
and others, developed the PfSPZ vaccine,

and this worked really well with 
three doses in people in the US,

so people who had no experience with 
malaria infections before. But when they

ultimately got this into children in Africa 
who had had malaria infections in the past,

the vaccines didn't work very well, so that 
hasn't moved forward for that population.

There's actually been some really 
interesting work more recently that

they've used genetically attenuated parasites. 
So instead of irradiating the parasites and

then using them, they've made them so that 
they can't survive beyond the liver stage,

but importantly, if these parasites 
live to the end of the liver stage,

then they're really protective. And there 
was a recent study where they showed that a

single dose of this vaccine provided really high 
levels of protection in their challenge trial.

But again, this was in people that 
haven't been exposed to malaria before,

so while this looks really exciting at the moment,

it still needs to be tested in the field, 
in people who have been exposed to malaria,

and then ultimately in children as well. But 
it's really exciting. It's pretty game changing

if you can get a single dose vaccine to protect 
against malaria; we've never seen that before.

But the challenge with these parasites is that 
they need to be stored in liquid nitrogen,

so you can't just kill them like we have done 
in the past with other whole pathogen vaccines.

They need to be viable, they need to be able to 
survive in the liver, and that's gonna be quite

challenging for delivery in Africa, because there 
aren't liquid nitrogen facilities everywhere.

Why does it have to be so cold?

That's the way of putting them in stasis.

Is it just preserving them?

Preserving them, yeah. So that they 
can be woken up. They've either got

to be kept alive until you inject them, 
or you can try and cryo-preserve them in

a way that they could be thawed, 
and then they'd still be viable.

What if someone found a different way 
to preserve them for a long time? Are

there other options? Can you 
like freeze frame a vaccine?

No. The - no?

I have no idea. I feel, well, I've 
been watching a lot of Pokémon and

Team Rocket has all of these crazy 
tools and equipment to do things.

We can learn from them.

I feel like they would have a laser beam 
that could just freeze someone in place.

That would be cool, yeah.

Let's take a note. Let, let's look into that, 
I think that could be pretty interesting.

I know a funder that's just started there.

Yeah. Yeah. Let me just, actually I've 
already got too much in my laser beam column,

someone else is gonna have fund that one. But...

Also this laser beam thing 
that could freeze - could be

used much more widely than just malaria research.

You could zap people miles away. It's interesting

I don't hear people talking about this 
more given how important it could be.

Yeah!

Now on our current technologies, boring, so 
it sounds like - my sort of takeaways from

this section are that when people talk about 
vaccines, the thing you always hear about is

efficacy. COVID vaccine is 90% efficacious, blah, 
blah, blah, blah, blah. But that is one number.

Firstly, that number does not bake 
in to the public narrative, duration.

It does not matter if something is 90% 
efficacious and lasts for three months,

if it then decays. Secondly, it doesn't bake in 
cost. What's the manufacturability of this? How

widespread is it gonna be in a global health 
context? But then in addition, it doesn't bake

in how many doses do you need? And, in a context 
where people might not be - they're juggling a

lot, may not come back for a second, third, or 
fourth dose; getting down from four to three,

three to two or two to one is just an 
incredibly big deal, not for scientists,

but for people in the real world who're 
actually gonna be taking these vaccines.

So Katharine, is that a fair summary?

Yeah, absolutely. Spot on.

It reminds me of, you know the HPV vaccine, 
where it was originally a three dose vaccine,

and then it turned out that actually one 
dose was really effective. But it took a

really long time for them to change the 
recommendation on how many doses people

needed. And now that they have that new 
recommendation that you only need one dose,

you can actually scale it up 
much more widely than before.

So, Katharine, if you had to make a 
guess, I'm gonna put you on the spot:

in 10 years will we have an approved vaccine 
in use, which is, say, two doses for kids?

10 years, I think, two doses is too 
high a bar. I think we can get to three.

Mm.

I think we can get to a more durable and a 
more protective vaccine with three doses.

What's the - what are the 
barriers to making it happen?

I don't know. Maybe I wanna change 
my answer there. I think 10 years,

I would put it 60% chance we can get to two doses.

Okay. But it's all to play for, you're 
saying it really could go either way.

Yeah, it's not a done deal. I think 
60% chance we can get to two doses,

like 90% chance we're gonna have a better vaccine.

Okay.

Three doses, 90%. That's too high, 80%.

Okay. So you're saying we've 
got to plug away and get to

a better vaccine than even the one you invented.

Definitely! R21 is suboptimal. It can have 
impact like we've discussed, but it's not a

game changing vaccine. The delivery challenges, 
the durability - that all needs to be solved.

Hmm.

Okay. So challenge number one then. So you're 
saying there's a good chance if we really push

for it, we can get to a better vaccine. Maybe 
it's three doses, maybe it's longer duration,

and then - but we have to also be aiming at the 
same time for even further improvement for kids,

and that's hopefully getting to perhaps two doses,

perhaps, you know, transmission 
blocking, that kind of thing.

Yeah, absolutely.

So it's all to play for. Okay. Saloni, how 
are you feeling at the end of this section?

This makes me sad.

I feel like it's so sad that one, our technology 
has improved so much, but it doesn't seem to have

made that much of a difference in terms of 
the efficacy – except for this one vaccine,

which is really hard to scale up because you 
need to cryo-preserve the sporozoite stage,

which means that it sort of rules it out being 
used widely. And the third thing, is that there

were like various vaccines that are in late stages 
of trials right now that could have been in late

stages 10 years ago. It's just the combination of 
all of that is just incredibly depressing to me.

Yeah. Well, can I try and cheer you up?

Yes.

Just to reorient to how many lives a vaccine 
can save. That is even imperfect. You know,

if R21 or RTS,S - I mean R21 seems more likely 
now - could scale up to more children who need it,

tens of thousands of children's lives would be 
saved already. And then Katharine is telling

us that within 10 years, we have a good shot 
at an improved vaccine that's even better,

so that is gonna matter to a lot of children.

And science, the reality of this problem 
is the hardness of it is set by nature,

and nature is a vicious, vicious, test setter 
sometimes. The fact we've got this far, I mean,

that is pretty impressive and we have a ways to 
go, but there's a line of sight to improvement,

even if not to the absolute a hundred 
percent blocking one dose thing.

I mean, I'm happy for the children 
who are getting these vaccines,

but it's just that counterfactual. It's 
just very hard to get out of your head.

Yeah. Yeah. So, Katharine, as you look 
to the next 10 years, how do you feel?

I'm optimistic. I think we can do better. I think 
we've got great people doing incredible work,

great new tools and more people thinking 
about the problem end to end. So more

people thinking more about more than just 
efficacy, with all the other criteria you

raised that we should be considering. 
More developers are now aware of all

of those things to consider in the development 
pathway, and so I think there's a lot of hope.

There's also the current rollout, 
right? That we could scale up.

Yeah, I think that's a tough one. I think 
it's a really difficult funding environment,

so we don't have enough donor support to provide

R21 and RTS,S or the countries that 
would like it, that would need it,

and are requesting from Gavi. So if we had more 
support coming from the different donor countries.

The UK's cutting back, US cutting 
back, Japan's cutting back.

Germany as well. What I read from a report, 
talking about the situation at the time,

two years ago, was back then, both of 
the vaccines had been pre-qualified

from by the World Health Organization 
and they were being rolled out and they

estimated that it would take another 
12 years after that for all children

under three in the countries with high 
malaria prevalence to be vaccinated.

And another 2.5 million children were expected to 
die being unvaccinated from malaria, and the main

constraints to increasing the number of children 
who were vaccinated fast was a lack of funding.

And I remember reading this and finding 
it surprising in one sense that this was

the only constraint. But also, I think, 
after everything that we talked about,

thinking that it was actually not that surprising 
and just very depressing. But the fact that if you

had a few more billion dollars of funding 
for Gavi, which supports vaccination in

countries around the world, you could vaccinate 
enough children to save another 300,000 lives.

The other thing that was interesting to 
me about this was that one of the reasons

that there was this funding constraint 
was that one of the countries with the

highest burdens of malaria was Nigeria. And 
Nigeria had just increased its GDP enough

to be placed in a higher threshold, of a 
higher income country, according to Gavi,

and that meant that they were no longer eligible 
for financial support to purchase these vaccines,

and that meant that a lot of children would 
go unvaccinated, and that the cost was just

so much higher after just passing this threshold. 
It seemed very bad to me that that was the case.

But there is some good news, which is 
that there was another deal where the

price of R21 was reduced from $4 to $3 per dose,

and that would save around $90 million and 
help vaccinate another 7 million children.

So all in all, what do you each wish 
that donors and funders and other

decision makers understood about vaccine 
development that they're getting wrong?

I mean, I think it's one of these situations where 
actually throwing money at the problem would make

a difference. And that is something that people 
might find surprising in other fields, but here,

funding Gavi would actually go a pretty long 
way. Or funding the other types of malaria

vaccine research would go a long way. I 
think that's quite surprising to people.

I think we should really be learning from 
our experience with RTS,S and R21. And the

biggest problem, with both those vaccines, is 
getting all of the doses into the children,

that they need. So thinking more carefully about 
how you develop a product that's deliverable,

earlier on in development, could have 
such a dramatic impact on the impact the

vaccine can actually have. And I don't 
think the researchers doing the work,

the ones running the very first trials in 
humans, are thinking about that enough.

Right? It's less pizzaz-y, but actually 
testing different delivery schedules in

the clinical trials can have these incredible

downstream effects of what gets 
recommended for millions of kids.

And maybe it's not fair to put that all on 
the researchers and the developers actually, I

think. They're asking for funding to do the work. 
Funding's tight and limited, funders will give you

the bare minimum, to do the bare minimum. So you 
can only test one schedule, and so you have to go

with what you have the data on already, or what 
already looks promising instead of exploring what

the other options could be. To me, that's also 
on the funders to really understand that as well.

I think another thing is - that people 
may not know is just how important it is

to have clinical trial infrastructure, to have 
better ways of running trials more efficiently,

but also just more sites, more people doing 
these tests, being able to test multiple

vaccines and not having the situation 
where people have to prioritize funding

for one vaccine over the other, at the 
expense of testing the others as well.

But I think there's also another part to 
the story as well in that, with malaria,

everybody knows about malaria. The burden's really 
well known. So as soon as a malaria vaccine was

developed, countries were asking for it. They 
knew they had a problem, they wanted the vaccine

and they're pushing to roll it out to protect 
people, so those vaccines can have an impact.

But there are other vaccines that we've 
tried to develop in the past where we

didn't have good data on the burden in all 
the countries that possibly needed it. And so

I think the Hib vaccine was a good example. 
It was developed, it was ready to be used,

but countries didn't know they had a problem. 
So it was this huge delay in rollout. There's

so much more that needs to be done when 
you're thinking about developing a vaccine,

beyond just developing the product, 
thinking about how it's gonna reach people,

and how people are gonna understand whether 
they need the vaccine, what the demand is.

That was quite an episode. That is our first 
episode where we had a expert interviewee with

us the entire time. Thank you so much, Katharine. 
And now it's time to conclude with what some

of the things, what are some of the things we 
learned or that stuck out to us from this episode?

And I'm gonna start. Number one, how much 
you can learn from patents. It turns out

that there are people who read them and then 
they tweak them, and then they change them,

and then they make new inventions. I mean, that 
really gave me hope for public knowledge again.

That was really cool to hear about.

Saloni, what did you, what stuck with you?

So I had a bunch of thoughts. The first 
one, which I was thinking about before

we started recording was that, and 
this is a very unpopular opinion,

but some PhDs are just better than others 
and some fields are better than others too.

I know it's controversial, but I think more 
students should go into infectious diseases,

and should go into vaccine development. 
And I have many thoughts about which fields

should move into those, but I won't name them 
- they'll probably, they'll know who they are.

The other was that I thought it was really 
interesting to hear about the Jenner Institute,

and how it was set up in such a way that there 
was a manufacturing facility that researchers

could work with, and they could learn from 
that stage of the process in manufacturing.

And I thought maybe more institutes should 
be set up like this, where you can see the

both the basic research and the translation and 
the manufacturing happening in the same place,

and learn from these different stages. That I 
thought was a really cool thing to learn about.

The other that stuck with me throughout this 
episode was that malaria is very complicated,

especially compared to the other pathogens 
that we've talked about in previous episodes.

It has many different stages of its 
lifecycle, it changes shape. It's harder

to develop vaccines for malaria than for many 
other diseases. And there were various parts

of that process that were just very tricky 
to do scientifically. It was hard to find

good animal models that helped replicate 
what the disease would be like in humans.

The next was that a lot of the research funding 
for malaria was affected by priorities that

high income countries had. So in the 1950s 
during the global Malaria eradication program,

the funding for research dried up and a lot of 
researchers were made program operators in the

eradication program, and that stalled research 
until the Vietnam War, where the US Army troops

were facing potentially drug resistant malaria, 
and there was now a renewed need for research

into new malaria drugs, but also malaria 
vaccines. And that is where the RTS,S vaccine

originally came from, was research from people 
who were working on that during the Vietnam War.

So that stood out to me as well, that we sort 
of think of research happening in the lab,

but it's really actually influenced by 
all of these much broader considerations,

and the historical context, and things like that, 
that I think people don't appreciate enough.

So the first one for me is 
probably the cost, scalability,

and deliverability are actually really 
important. People should think about them

earlier in the process. I think it's clear 
from the R21 and RTS,S experiences that the

vaccines could have much greater impact 
if those things were considered earlier.

I also thought that just within that 
process, it's not just the broader concerns,

but at every stage of vaccine development, these 
things are really important. Like how you develop

the adjuvants and how expensive those are, or 
how that affects the efficacy of the vaccines,

and how accessible they might be later on as well. 
And then things like, how does the dosing of the

vaccine that's being developed affect how easy 
it is to scale it up, across countries, or across

millions of children, I think is something that 
people underappreciate. And then similarly, the

vaccination schedules - the fact that the malaria 
vaccine is taken at different ages than other

childhood vaccines, and how that affects uptake 
of the vaccines, is something that was new to me.

And just this idea of making things more efficient 
at all of these stages could be really important.

I've been reading the book The Origins of 
Efficiency by Brian Potter, and one of the key

things that stood out to me from that book was 
just how much progress we've made in medicine,

but also engineering, and all parts of life 
were from improving the efficiency of things

that people have already discovered, and that 
that stage can often make the difference between

something that is possible versus something 
that's actually used by millions of people,

and I think that's actually 
a huge part of the picture.

The other thing that I have always been 
thinking about is just how different things

could have been. Like what others, what other 
alternative universe we could have lived in,

if things were different. And the key 
things that I think about here are:

one, how things would be different if 
there was more funding. And second,

how different things would be if there was better 
infrastructure for running clinical trials.

And we talked about a bunch of examples of how 
that could have been different. So one, that

probably would've sped up the developments of the 
RTS,S vaccine, the first malaria vaccine. Having

the clinical trials sites set up earlier, that 
would've made a difference. Having more funding,

that would've made a difference. But then we also 
talked about other vaccine candidates for malaria,

and how more funding for that research could 
have changed the picture and sped up the trials

for those vaccines. And then finally, the 
rollout of the malaria vaccines that have

already been approved could be sped up with more 
funding. And that funding was the constraint,

and still is the constraint, to 
getting that out to more children.

And I think that often people think of 
this as purely a scientific problem,

but I think that's not the case, and 
that in many situations when we're

talking about diseases that affect people and 
poor countries, often commercial incentives,

and funding, and the historical context and all 
of these things actually have a very big impact.

I think it's really easy to look back and think 
about how things could have been done differently

with hindsight. But it's really important 
to remember that these were really uncharted

times for this type of vaccine, and it's really 
quite amazing what was achieved over the time.

Obviously, we all wish things could have been done 
faster and can keep going faster in the future,

but it is quite remarkable what was achieved. But 
I think it's important that we do look back. I

think we should all be looking at the experiences 
of the past and learning from them so we can

improve what we're doing as we're developing 
future vaccines; learn from those mistakes.

And you know, now as a funder, I'm trying 
to take a lot of those lessons and those

experiences and apply them to the development of 
next gen malaria vaccines and Strep A (Group A

Streptococcus) vaccines and any other products 
we end up working on at Coefficient Giving.

What you just mentioned, made me realize that the 
alternative universe that we could have lived in:

it could have been faster, but it also could have 
been slower, and I hadn't thought about that.

I think my main takeaway from looking 
backwards into the past today is about

the present and about the future. 
And it's that we live at a time of

scientific wonder. We - people who invented 
world-changing technology are among us today.

Invention is often a process of building on other 
people's work, tinkering, tinkering in the lab,

and taking care of those lab notebooks, looking 
in an electron microscope, trying an experiment,

changing what you started with, trying another 
experiment. And these people are heroes.

They're real people. Sometimes you can 
even get them to come on your podcast,

thank you very much, Katharine. And to anyone 
listening, you may know one of these people,

and society may not recognize it yet, and they're 
still inventing and they're still trying stuff.

You may become one of these people in the 
future. And when it comes to science, we are

all in this together. We're trying to figure 
out what is true and what we should do next.

So I just wanna end by saying, 
Katharine, thank you very much.

This was very enjoyable and I'm very 
excited about everything that comes next.

Thank you. It's been great 
to be here. Great to chat.

If you enjoyed this episode, you should rate us 
on Spotify or Apple or wherever you listen to this

and share it with everyone you know, including any 
parasites that you are currently infected with.

Maybe they are heroes too, you never know, 
they could contribute in their own way.

Please share this one in particular with 
anyone who's considering starting a PhD.

Yes!

Great. See you next time everyone!

Bye!

Bye!

Bye!