Effective, safe antimalarial vaccines have proved elusive. The synthetic polypeptide SPf66 vaccine is based on preerythrocytic and asexual blood-stage proteins of Plasmodium falciparum. We report here a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial of the efficacy of the SPf66 vaccine against clinical P falciparum malaria in idete, southern Tanzania, an area of intense perennial malaria transmission. 586 children aged 1-5 years received three doses of vaccine (n = 274) or placebo (n = 312). The incidence and density of parasitaemia were assessed through repeated cross-sectional surveys on subgroups of children. Morbidity was monitored over a 1 year period through passive case detection in all children plus active case detection in a subgroup of 191. An episode of clinical malaria was defined as measured fever (> or = 37.5 degrees C) and parasite density > 20,000/microL. No severe side-effects were seen and the frequency of mild side-effects after the third dose was less than 6%. The vaccine was highly immunogenic and after three doses all vaccine recipients had detectable anti-SPf66 antibodies: the geometric mean index of response was 8.3 in the vaccine group and 0.7 in the placebo group. The incidence of parasitaemia was similar in both groups. 123 children had at least one episode of clinical malaria during the follow-up period after the third dose and annual incidence rates were 0.25 in the vaccine group and 0.35 in the placebo group. Estimated vaccine efficacy was 31% (95% confidence interval 0-52%; p = 0.046). After the third dose there were 6 deaths among the study cohort (1 vaccine, 5 placebo). This study confirms that SPf66 is safe, immunogenic and reduces the risk of clinical malaria among children exposed to intense P falciparum transmission.