Abstract

BackgroundDespite the known burden of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) on child health, there is limited information on current efforts to increase pediatric therapeutic options. Our objective was to quantify and characterize research activity and treatment availability for NTDs in children in order to inform the prioritization of future research efforts.Methodology/Principal findingsWe conducted a review of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry Platform to assess research activity for NTDs. The burden of disease of each NTD was measured in terms of disability adjusted life years (DALYs), which was extracted from the Global Health Data Exchange. First- and second-line medications for each NTD were identified from WHO guidelines. We reviewed FDA drug labels for each medication to determine whether they were adequately labeled for use in children. Descriptive statistics, binomial tests, and Spearman’s rank order correlations were calculated to assess research activity compared to burden of disease. Children comprised 34% of the 20 million DALYs resulting from NTDs, but pediatric trials contributed just 17% (63/369) of trials studying these conditions (p<0.001 for binomial test). Conditions that were particularly under-represented in pediatric populations compared to adults included rabies, leishmaniasis, scabies, and dengue. Pediatric drug trial activity was poorly correlated with pediatric burden of disease across NTDs (Spearman’s rho = 0.41, p = 0.12). There were 47 medications recommended by the WHO for the treatment of NTDs, of which only 47% (n = 22) were adequately labeled for use in children. Of the 25 medications lacking adequate pediatric labeling, three were under study in pediatric trials.Conclusions/SignificanceThere is a substantial gap between the burden of disease for NTDs in children and research devoted to this population. Most medications lack adequate pediatric prescribing information, highlighting the urgency to increase pediatric research activity for NTDs with high burden of disease and limited treatment options.

Highlights

  • Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are a group of poverty-associated parasitic, bacterial, and viral conditions that affect more than 1.4 billion people worldwide [1]

  • There is a substantial gap between the burden of disease for NTDs in children and research devoted to this population

  • In contrast to studies in adults that showed leishmaniasis was one of the moststudied NTDs [32] our study showed that it is relatively under-represented in pediatric populations

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Summary

Introduction

Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are a group of poverty-associated parasitic, bacterial, and viral conditions that affect more than 1.4 billion people worldwide [1]. The burden of NTDs in children is compounded by the general underrepresentation of pediatric populations in clinical trials and drug development [9]. This is principally a function of the oft limited financial incentives for drug development in children, as well as the greater scientific, ethical, and regulatory challenges in conducting trials in this population [9]. Despite the substantial and ongoing burden of NTDs on child health, there is limited information on current efforts to increase pediatric therapeutic options [5]. Despite the known burden of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) on child health, there is limited information on current efforts to increase pediatric therapeutic options. Our objective was to quantify and characterize research activity and treatment availability for NTDs in children in order to inform the prioritization of future research efforts

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