A conversation with Stephen Hoffman

Scientist survives several near misses — including a crash-landing — before turning his efforts toward fighting malaria

Off on his own in South America, he gets typhoid. In California, he is infected with malaria. On his way to a research site in Africa, the plane carrying him crash-lands.

Is Stephen Hoffman, the leader of malaria-vaccine developer Sanaria, scared by his past skirmishes with death? Sometimes.

Read the full story in the latest Washington Business Journal.|

Rockville’s Sanaria to test malaria vaccine

While Sanaria Inc. works to keep its focus on developing revenue streams, the estimated 3,000 children who die each day in a global resurgence of malaria add a humanitarian perspective for the Rockville company. This week, Sanaria, headed by CEO Stephen Hoffman, begins manufacturing its first run of a unique and promising malaria vaccine.

An Interview with Dr. Stephen Hoffman

In Essential Science Indicators, Dr. Hoffman’s work can be found in the fields of Immunology and Microbiology. Dr. Hoffman is the founder, CEO, and Chief Scientific Officer of Sanaria, Inc. in Rockville, Maryland. In the interview below, he talks with Special Topics correspondent Gary Taubes about his highly cited work in malaria research.

Sanaria Inc. Receives Multi-Year $3 Million U.S. NIH Phase II Small Business Innovation Research Grant for Further Development of its Malaria Vaccine

Sanaria Inc., a Rockville, Maryland privately held company focused on development of an attenuated whole parasite Malaria Vaccine, announced the receipt of a multi-year Phase II Small Business Innovation Research Grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Protection of Humans against Malaria by Immunization with Radiation-Attenuated Plasmodium falciparum Sporozoites

During 1989-1999, 11 volunteers were immunized by the bites of 1001-2927 irradiated mosquitoes harboring infectious sporozoites of Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) strain NF54 or clone 3D7/NF54. Ten volunteers were first challenged by the bites of Pf-infected mosquitoes 2-9 weeks after the last immunization, and all were protected. A volunteer challenged 10 weeks after the last immunization was not protected. Five previously protected volunteers were rechallenged 23-42 weeks after a secondary immunization, and 4 were protected.

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