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    Home > Headlines > New, effective anti-malaria drug could help fight rising resistance, says Novartis
    Headlines

    New, effective anti-malaria drug could help fight rising resistance, says Novartis

    Published by Global Banking and Finance Review

    Posted on November 12, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    New, effective anti-malaria drug could help fight rising resistance, says Novartis - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:malariahealthcare

    Quick Summary

    Novartis reveals GanLum, a new drug effective against malaria, addressing resistance issues with 97% success in trials.

    Table of Contents

    • Overview of the New Malaria Drug
    • Effectiveness and Clinical Trials
    • Challenges of Drug Resistance
    • Future Availability and Regulatory Approval

    Novartis Unveils Promising New Malaria Drug to Combat Resistance

    Overview of the New Malaria Drug

    By Jennifer Rigby

    Effectiveness and Clinical Trials

    LONDON (Reuters) -A new antimalarial drug developed by Novartis is as effective as existing treatments and could help tackle rising drug resistance, the company said on Wednesday as it presented final-stage trial results.

    Challenges of Drug Resistance

    The drug, ganaplacide/lumefantrine or GanLum, was developed by the company and the Medicines for Malaria Venture, a non-profit.

    Future Availability and Regulatory Approval

    It was more than 97% effective at treating malaria in a phase III trial among 1,688 adults and children across 34 sites in 12 African countries, Novartis said.

    Malaria still kills more than 600,000 people annually, most of them children under 5 in sub-Saharan Africa.

    RISING RESISTANCE

    Existing treatments still work against the mosquito-borne disease – with an effectiveness of around 94% - but there is increasing concern about rising resistance to one of the key drugs used, artemisinin.

    Artemisinin resistance was first seen in Cambodia around twenty years ago, before spreading around the Mekong region. It is now increasingly a problem in African countries, with confirmed partial resistance in Eritrea, Rwanda, Uganda and Tanzania.

    “Drug resistance is a growing threat to Africa, so new treatment options can’t come a moment too soon,” said Abdoulaye Djimdé, the trial lead and professor of parasitology and mycology at the University of Science, Techniques and Technologies of Bamako, Mali.

    If resistance becomes more widespread, the fear is that the existing therapies – known as artemisinin combination therapies – will stop working.

    George Jagoe, head of access at MMV, likened the new drug to having a fire extinguisher ready for a coming blaze, rather than being as unprepared as the world was when previous malaria drugs started to fail.

    Ganaplacide is a new type of drug and represents the first major advance in decades, Novartis and an external scientist said.

    “Finally new compounds are being proven effective for the treatment of malaria,” Dr Alena Pance, senior genetics lecturer at the University of Hertfordshire, said.

    GanLum works differently to previous antimalarials, and unlike many of those treatments also blocks transmission as it acts on the malaria parasite at the point where it can spread back from an infected human to the mosquito that bites them.

    Novartis will now apply for regulatory approval, the company said, and expects to see GanLum available in countries within the next year to 18 months, on a non-profit basis.

    (Reporting by Jennifer Rigby, Editing by Nick Zieminski)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Novartis has developed a new antimalarial drug, GanLum.
    • •GanLum shows 97% effectiveness in phase III trials.
    • •Rising drug resistance in Africa is a major concern.
    • •GanLum works differently and blocks malaria transmission.
    • •Regulatory approval is expected within 18 months.

    Frequently Asked Questions about New, effective anti-malaria drug could help fight rising resistance, says Novartis

    1What is malaria?

    Malaria is a life-threatening disease caused by parasites transmitted to people through the bites of infected mosquitoes. It is prevalent in tropical and subtropical regions.

    2What is drug resistance?

    Drug resistance occurs when a disease-causing organism, such as a parasite or bacteria, evolves and becomes less responsive to medications that previously worked against it.

    3What is GanLum?

    GanLum is a new antimalarial drug developed by Novartis, designed to be effective against malaria and to combat rising drug resistance.

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