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Researchers
Develop Strategic Plan for AIDS Vaccine Development
By Karla Gale
The
Global HIV/AIDS Vaccine Enterprise, an international alliance of
independent agencies and organizations conducting or supporting
HIV vaccine research,
has issued a new roadmap to speed the development of a vaccine by
promoting new collaboration, resources, and strategic focus.
"Harnessing
new scientific opportunities for HIV vaccine development will require
an effort of a magnitude, intensity, and design without precedent
in biomedical research," the coordinating committee of the
Enterprise writes in its report in the February issue of Public
Library of Science (PLoS) Medicine.
"The
first trial of an HIV vaccine was done almost 18 years ago. We have
come to realize that developing an HIV vaccine is much more complex
than we all thought," Dr. Jose Esparza, of the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation, told Reuters Health.
To
make an HIV vaccine a reality in the foreseeable future, "we
need a new game plan that brings more corroboration, a better exchange
of information and a more systematic approach to explore different
vaccines," he said.
The
committee hopes to "develop a common set of criteria to make
decisions about which ones should be tested and which ones should
move to larger scale trials," he added. "The field today
is inundated with 'me-too' products, similar candidate vaccines,
and not enough innovation."
The
scientists were able to agree on the scientific questions that must
be answered to develop an HIV vaccine that induces both cellular
and humoral immunity, Dr. Esparza said. But without the Enterprise,
"the current system does not have the required infrastructure
or resources to answer those questions."
Specific
goals will be to develop new standard assays; a system of "core"
reference laboratories that will service satellite labs; a global
quality assurance function to encompass all participating laboratories;
and a source of common reagents, including antisera/antibodies and
viral isolates.
The
Enterprise Coordinating Committee estimates that, to meet these
goals, current expenditures on HIV vaccine research and development
will need to be doubled to $1.2 billion annually.
This
proposal is "an excellent start to a continuing dialogue of
utmost importance," Dr. David D. Ho, the director of the Aaron
Diamond AIDS Research Center in New York, comments in a related
editorial.
01/19/05
PLoS
Medicine 2005;2:e25-e36.

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