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In this regular feature on Breakthroughs, we highlight some of the most interesting reads in global health research from the past week.

May 4, 2026 by Hannah Sachs-Wetstone

A new US National Institutes of Health-funded study conducted in seven high tuberculosis (TB)-burden countries found that a new and improved near point-of-care TB test platform was highly accurate, effective, and scaleable. Pluslife Biotech’s MiniDock MTB test platform is battery operated, low-cost, provides results in 30 minutes, and can be used with tongue swabs in addition to sputum samples, which certain groups, including babies and people living with HIV, cannot produce. The new test is well-suited for low-resource, smaller, or more rural health clinics, which may not have access to current resource-intensive, expensive molecular testing options. 

The University of Oxford and the Serum Institute of India have signed a license agreement to support the development, large-scale manufacturing, and potential future commercialization of the malaria vaccine candidate R78C for use in clinical settings. R78C combines two Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage antigens, designed to target the malaria parasite at multiple points in its lifecycle, offering longer and more effective protection. This new license, which builds on a long-standing collaboration between the partners on malaria vaccine work, will initially help accelerate the candidate into clinical evaluation. The Serum Institute of India’s global manufacturing capabilities will also help ensure that resulting successful malaria vaccines can be manufactured at scale and deployed affordably to malaria-endemic countries. 

The Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) and Novartis recently announced that the World Health Organization (WHO) has prequalified Coartem® Baby, the first and only antimalarial drug developed specifically for newborns and young infants weighing between 2 and 5 kilograms. This treatment will help address a long-standing gap in malaria care for this group, who are often treated with antimalarial formulations intended for use in older children, which can increase the risk of toxicity or underdosing. The prequalification designation enables countries and global procurers to start purchasing and deploying the treatment in malaria-endemic countries; Novartis is making the treatment available on a largely nonprofit basis in malaria-endemic regions. 

About the author

Hannah Sachs-WetstoneGHTC

Hannah supports advocacy and communications activities and member coordination for GHTC. Her role includes developing and disseminating digital communications, tracking member and policy news, engaging coalition members, and organizing meetings and events.Prior to joining GHTC,...read more about this author