HOUSTON, Texas & PRINCETON, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
The Angola Sickle Cell Initiative, a public-private partnership of the
Angola Ministry of Health, the Baylor College of Medicine International
Pediatric AIDS Initiative (BIPAI), Texas Children’s Hospital and
Chevron, is teaming up with the global biopharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers
Squibb to provide children with sickle cell disease in Angola with
an effective medication to which many patients in the country have
lacked access.
The program will provide thousands of Angolan children regular access to Droxia
(hydroxyurea), which is indicated to reduce the frequency of painful
crises and the need for blood transfusions in patients with sickle cell
anemia with recurrent moderate to severe painful crises. This new
five-year demonstration program is intended to build understanding of
the effectiveness of treating children in resource-limited settings and
to establish the cost benefits to the healthcare systems.
“World Sickle Cell Day was June 19, so this is a momentous time to
announce this new partnership to provide potentially life-altering
medication to thousands of children in Angola, one of Africa’s countries
hardest hit by sickle cell disease,” said Dr. David Poplack, director of
the Texas Children’s Cancer and Hematology Centers and professor of
pediatric oncology at Baylor College of Medicine. “Hydroxyurea is known
to lessen the devastating complications of sickle cell disease.”
Sickle cell disease is an inherited disorder in which red blood cells
become irregularly shaped. These sickle-shaped cells can get stuck in
small blood vessels, which can slow or block blood flow and oxygen to
parts of the body, resulting in painful episodes, serious infections,
chronic anemia, damage to body organs and stroke, among other
complications.
Angola has one of the world's highest rates of the genetic blood
condition with up to 10,000 babies born with the disease each year. By
some estimates, up to 50 percent of these children die before five years
of age. However, most patients in the country have not had access to
hydroxyurea.
Bristol-Myers Squibb will donate Droxia for the treatment of up
to 1,200 children during the first two years of the program, increasing
this up to 4,100 after the pilot period. The program will launch in
Luanda and Cabinda and later will expand to additional sites. Last year,
Bristol-Myers Squibb made an initial donation of Droxia to the
Angola Sickle Cell Initiative.
“We are proud to partner with the Angola Sickle Cell Initiative to help
bring much needed treatment to infants born with this painful and deadly
disease,” said John Damonti, vice president of corporate philanthropy at
Bristol-Myers Squibb and president of the Bristol-Myers Squibb
Foundation. “As important as providing treatment to the 4,100 children
is that at the end of this five-year demonstration project, we should
have ample data needed for governments and funders to consider providing
the resources necessary to support large-scale treatment programs.”
According to Bristol-Myers Squibb, hydroxyurea is indicated to reduce
the frequency of painful crises and need for blood transfusions in adult
patients with sickle cell anemia with recurrent moderate to severe
painful crises (generally at least 3 during the preceding 12 months).
Hydroxyurea should be administered under the supervision of a physician
experienced in the use of this medication for the treatment of sickle
cell anemia since treatment of patients with hydroxyurea may be
complicated by severe, sometimes life-threatening, adverse effects.
The Angola Sickle Cell Initiative will provide medical care and
management of the drug to children in the treatment program. The Angolan
Ministry of Health has committed to the continued treatment of all the
children on hydroxyurea when they reach 10 years old. The emergency
response and global health organization AmeriCares also is a key
partner, shipping the drug from Bristol-Myers Squibb to Angola.
Leaders of this new initiative hope to demonstrate over the five years
the health benefits and cost effectiveness of a hydroxyurea treatment
program for infants with sickle cell disease, and use patient data and
outcomes as the foundation for an advocacy plan to provide treatment to
all children in Angola and throughout the continent. Hydroxyurea
currently has generic status and is on the World Health Organization
List of Essential Medicines.
“Agreements like this public-private partnership allow governments to
address gaps in healthcare to meet the needs of its most vulnerable
citizens – sick children,” said Michael Mizwa, chief operating officer
of BIPAI, and director of Texas Children’s Global Health. “We hope
BIPAI’s legal and operational framework in Angola will provide a
foundation for many more such partnerships in the future.”
The Angola Sickle Cell Initiative has been in place in Angola since
2011. Before its launch, newborns were not screened for the disease.
Since 2011, more than 150,000 babies have been screened and more than
1,700 babies and children are now in care and treatment.
Led by Dr. Gladstone Airewele, associate professor of pediatrics at
Baylor and head of the Global Hematology Program at Texas Children’s
Hospital, the Initiative also includes an education and training
component. More than 1,500 Angolans have been trained through the
program, including local physicians, nurses, laboratory technicians,
phlebotomists, social workers and research coordinators.
The Baylor International Pediatric AIDS Initiative at Texas Children’s
Hospital, or BIPAI, is the foundation on which the Angola Sickle Cell
Initiative is based. BIPAI treats more than 250,000 children with
HIV/AIDS across a network of clinical centers in Africa and Romania in
which the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation is also a major partner.
Texas Children’s Cancer and Hematology Centers have provided key support
in the success of the Angola Sickle Cell Initiative, and Chevron has
provided $9 million in funding over nine years to the Angola Sickle Cell
Initiative.
About Bristol-Myers Squibb
Bristol-Myers Squibb is a global biopharmaceutical company whose mission
is to discover, develop and deliver innovative medicines that help
patients prevail over serious diseases. For more information about
Bristol-Myers Squibb, visit us at BMS.com
or follow us on LinkedIn,
Twitter,
YouTube
and Facebook.
About AmeriCares
AmeriCares is an emergency response and global health organization
committed to saving lives and building healthier futures for people in
crisis in the United States and around the world. Every day, AmeriCares
puts critically needed medicines and supplies in the hands of frontline
health workers and develops innovative, sustainable health improvements
in their communities. For more information, visit americares.org.

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Source: Bristol-Myers Squibb