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AIDS
Pioneer Luc Montagnier Calls for Focus on 'Therapeutic' Vaccine
Researchers should first develop a
so-called therapeutic
vaccine to treat people already infected with HIV before
moving on to a preventative one, the co-discoverer of the AIDS virus
said on Friday.
Professor Luc Montagnier, president
of the World Foundation for AIDS Research and Prevention, said there
were immense technical obstacles in making and testing a prophylactic
vaccine and a stepwise approach was the only realistic option.
Initially, researchers should test
several formulations of therapeutic vaccines, whose effectiveness
is easy to measure, and then derive a preventative one from the
best formulation, he told a meeting of the European Medicines Agency.
"A therapeutic vaccine may take
a few years," he said.
"This is my prediction - we will
have a therapeutic vaccine which will be a better substitute for
antiretroviral therapy. This will be very important, especially
for patients in the developing
world because they won't be able to afford (drug) treatment."
Some 30 different vaccines
are being tested in small-scale trials around the world. But even
the most advanced, assuming they work, are not expected to reach
the market for many years, in part reflecting the difficulty of
conducting clinical trials.
Microsoft Corp founder Bill Gates,
a major funder of vaccine research, predicted earlier this month
it would take more than a decade to develop an effective AIDS vaccine.
03/14/05
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