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Summary: Background Previous efficacy trials of SPf66 malaria vaccine have produced conflicting results in different populations.We report a randomised double-blind trial of the SPf66 vaccine conducted in Karen children aged 2-15 living in a malarious region of northwestern Thailand. Recombinant hepatitis B vaccine was used as a comparator.

Methods The study had a power of 90 percent to detect an efficacy of 30 percent, defined as a reduction in the incidence of first cases of symptomatic falciparum malaria after three doses of vaccine.1221 children received three immunisations and were eligible for the primary efficacy analysis. Intense active and passive case detection continued over 15 months of follow-up.

Findings The SPf66 vaccine was well tolerated, although 26 children had mild or moderately severe local or systemic allergic reactions, compared with none in the comparator group.The vaccine was immunogenic; after three doses, 73 percent of recipients had seroconverted. There were no deaths due to malaria during the study. During the 15-month period of evaluation there were 379 first cases of symptomatic falciparum malaria (195 in the SPf66 recipients, 184 in the comparator group); an SPf66 efficacy of -9 percent (95 percent CI - 33 to 14, p=0.41). No significant differences between the two study groups in parasite density or any other measure of malaria-related morbidity were detected.

Interpretation These findings are consistent with a recent study showing lack of efficacy of SPf66 among Gambian infants and differ from earlier positive reports from South America and evidence of borderline efficacy from Tanzania.We conclude that SPf66 does not protect against clinical falciparum malaria and that further efficacy trials are not warranted.

Lancet 1996; 348: 701-07

Copyright. (C) The Lancet Ltd, 1996.