Immunity to asexual blood stage malaria and vaccine approaches

J Wipasa, S Elliott, H Xu… - Immunology and cell …, 2002 - Wiley Online Library
J Wipasa, S Elliott, H Xu, MF Good
Immunology and cell biology, 2002Wiley Online Library
The development of a malaria vaccine seems to be a definite possibility despite the fact that
even individuals with a life time of endemic exposure do not develop sterile immunity. An
effective malaria vaccine would be invaluable in preventing malaria‐associated deaths in
endemic areas, especially amongst children less than 5 years of age and pregnant women.
This review discusses our current understanding of immunity against the asexual blood
stage of malaria− the stage that is responsible for the symptoms of the disease− and …
The development of a malaria vaccine seems to be a definite possibility despite the fact that even individuals with a life time of endemic exposure do not develop sterile immunity. An effective malaria vaccine would be invaluable in preventing malaria‐associated deaths in endemic areas, especially amongst children less than 5 years of age and pregnant women. This review discusses our current understanding of immunity against the asexual blood stage of malaria − the stage that is responsible for the symptoms of the disease − and approaches to the design of an asexual blood stage vaccine.
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