
HIV Vaccine Targets Subtype Circulating in Southern Africa
Recently, there have been several breakthroughs in the fight against HIV, including trials that would test an HIV vaccine targeting a specific subtype of the virus, and several prevention methods that would reduce the risk of infection transmission.
The emergence of infectious diseases, such as
HIV is not always the actual cause of death in individuals living with the virus. Opportunistic infections that would be less-dangerous in individuals who do not have weakened immune systems (a prognosis of HIV), can be life threatening. As a result, research on a cure for HIV remains paramount. Recently, there have been several
New HIV Vaccine Trial
A new clinical trial, HVTN 100, will examine a
Two vaccines will be used together in the regimen to be examined in the HVTN 100 trial: ALVAC-HIV, a canarypox-based vaccine produced by Sanofi Pasteur; and a protein vaccine using an adjuvant to boost immune response, produced by Novartis Vaccines. According to the press release, the Phase I/II trial will enroll 252 HIV-uninfected heterosexual adults between the ages of 18 and 40 years, who will receive eight vaccine injections over one year, after which they will receive booster shots.
HVTN 100, is sponsored by Pox-Protein Public-Private Partnership (P5)—which includes public as well as private organizations, such as the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)—and is part of a larger study which aims to not only create a vaccine, but also understand the body’s immune response that can prevent HIV infection.
The HVTN 100 trial results will be available within 2 years.
Preventing HIV Transmission
As a sexually transmitted disease, the use of condoms has long been touted as the number one way to prevent HIV transmission. A new
The trial followed adults with HIV-1 RNA with viral loads less than 200 copies/ml, using ART for a median of 1.3 years. There were 1,166 inital couples enrolled in the study, and of those, 888 couple participants provided approximately 1,200 eligible couple-years of follow up. Prior to enrollment, couples reported having engaged in sexual intercourse without condoms for a period of 2 years. A total count of about 22,000 condomless sex acts were reported in MSM couples, while 36,000 condomless sex acts were reported among heterosexual couples. By the end of the study, only 11 of the participants who were initially HIV-negative had become HIV-positive: 10 MSM and 1 heterosexual individual. However, “no phylogenetically (molecular characteristics that indicate whether a virus is similar or different from another) linked transmissions occurred over eligible couple-years of follow-up, giving a rate of within-couple HIV transmission of zero.” These individuals may have contracted HIV from non-study participants, as 129 of the enrolled HIV-negative patients reported engaging in condomless sex with other partners.
For those living with HIV, ART has many benefits. In addition to preventing sexual transmission between partners, a
With the production of an HIV vaccine, and a research focus on preventing HIV transmission, eradicating HIV infection may be in the forseeable future.
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