The Innovative Vector Control Consortium is a not-for-profit, product development partnership designed to facilitate the development and delivery of new and improved vector control tools to prevent malaria and other neglected tropical diseases. Their mission is to save lives, protect health and increase prosperity in areas where disease transmitted by insects is endemic.
Formation and Organisational Structure
The Innovative Vector Control Consortium is a not-for-profit public-private partnership that was established in 2005. IVCC is registered as a charity in the UK. IVCC was founded in 2005, through a grant to the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. IVCC was founded by LSTM Director and Professor Janet Hemingway. Nick Hamon is the Chief Executive Officer of IVCC. IVCC is headquartered in Liverpool, UK, but also has a registered office and staff in Washington, D.C., USA, as well as staff based in several other countries. The strategy and scope of IVCC is directed by its core team under governance of the Board of Trustees who represent a wide range of expertise.
Strategy
The IVCC vision is to save lives, protect health and increase prosperity in areas where disease transmitted by insects is endemic. The IVCC mission is to do this by building partnerships that create innovative solutions to prevent the transmission of insect-borne disease. IVCC facilitates the development and delivery of novel and improved vector control tools and solutions to combat the rapidly growing problem of insecticide resistance. The IVCC strategic plan is focused on three key pillars: developing, delivering and enabling. IVCC works with multiple stakeholders to develop and deliver novel public health vector control insecticides and tools to end-users to support the implementation of robust insecticide resistance management plans. This will enable national malaria control programmes to access a strong portfolio of new vector control solutions developed in accordance with stringent target product profiles. Although primarily focused on malaria, IVCC recognises that new tools and products can be effective against a wide range of other vector-borne diseases.
IVCC fully supports the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s report ‘From Aspiration to Action’ which sets out a comprehensive and achievable strategy for malaria eradication by 2040. is an initiative that works side by side with other malaria-fighting organisations toward the goal of ending the disease for good by the year 2040. For its part, ZERO by 40 focuses on the prevention of malaria through vector control. Founding partners of the initiative include IVCC and key global Crop Protection companies BASF, Bayer, Mitsui, Sumitomo and Syngenta, in conjunction with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. ZERO by 40 is a collaborative effort to manage and optimise current resources and innovate new vector control tools to help eradicate malaria.
Successes
IVCC has made great strides towards achieving its mission and has recorded many key accomplishments to date. A sample of these accomplishments include:
Evaluation of over 4.5 million compounds for potential use as public health insecticides leading to six classes of novel active ingredients identified for possible development.
Forged partnerships to establish African trial sites and new insectaries to provide industry standard testing.
Developed diagnostic system for malarial insecticide resistance detection and implemented within disease control programs in Africa.
Launched two new long-lasting indoor residual spray formulations to expand the range of vector control tools for challenging malarial insecticide resistance.
Launched insecticide quantification kits to monitor spray program implementation.
Facilitated the first African vector control field trial site to achieve good laboratory practice certification. Six other African vector control field trial site facilities expected to achieve GLP certification by the end of 2018.
Collaborated with BASF to develop the first new class of public health insecticide for malaria prevention in over 30 years. Interceptor® G2 is a LLIN that received an interim recommendation from WHO in June 2017.
Led a US $65.1 million initiative to support countries in obtaining new and effective insecticides at lower prices to spray walls in homes and fight growing insecticide resistance.