International HIV vaccine trial led by SLU under way in Africa
and the United States
ST. LOUIS -- Saint Louis University is leading an international vaccine trial
to study a promising HIV prevention vaccine in humans. The trial is being
conducted through the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN) of the National
Institutes of Health.
This is the first HVTN trial to be conducted simultaneously in the U.S. and
abroad, and it signifies a dedication to transcending borders in the fight
against HIV. This vaccine has never been tested in humans.
"Scientists want to know more about this candidate vaccine because it seems
to have the ability to make the immune system respond in ways that could help
the body fight HIV," said Geoffrey Gorse, M.D., from Saint Louis University
School of Medicine, the lead researcher on this international study. "This trial
is called a phase I trial, which means that it will test to see that the vaccine
candidate is safe and that it has an effect on the human immune system."
The trial is being conducted simultaneously in St. Louis, Boston (through
Harvard University) and Gaborone, Botswana.
The trial is looking at the safety and immune response of an experimental HIV
Vaccine called EP HIV-1090, known as a 'DNA plasmid' type of vaccine, said Dr.
Sharon Frey, the principal investigator on the trial at the Saint Louis
University site.
"The vaccine is not produced from live virus or from infected human cell
lines, so there is no possibility that its contains live or killed HIV virus,"
Frey said. "Therefore, it is not possible for someone to get HIV infection or
AIDS by receiving this vaccine."
While several HIV vaccine trials have been undertaken by the HVTN in a range
of countries, those studies have always followed a U.S. trial. This time
participants are receiving the same injections during the same time period at
all three sites.
The trial will last 18 months, with the injections received over a six-month
course, followed by a year of observation. Forty-two people will be enrolled in
the trial, with 36 receiving the candidate vaccine and six people getting a
placebo.
"This study is an important step in understanding this vaccine candidate and
whether it should be considered for a larger, phase II trial," Frey said.
This trial is the HVTN's first African trial, involving some of the
communities most impacted by AIDS in the development of an HIV vaccine. Africa,
and in particular Southern Africa, has been devastated by AIDS. The trials in
Botswana will be conducted through the Botswana-Harvard Partnership for HIV
Research and Education, based in Gaborone, Botswana.
"This vaccine candidate represents an important approach now under
investigation," Gorse said. "Moving any key candidate into human trials is
vitally important to developing an HIV vaccine."
There are several HIV vaccine candidates currently in trials or soon to begin
trials. Any or all of these may help us move closer to finding a vaccine for
HIV.
Other possible vaccine candidates continue to be developed, and the HVTN will
continue to carefully evaluate candidates and conduct new trials. The
experimental vaccine in this study was developed by researchers at Epimmune Inc.
in San Diego.
The process for finding an HIV vaccine is expected to take time. Most likely,
there will be many trials, and many different vaccine candidate variations will
need to be explored.
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To learn more about these studies, call the HIV Vaccine Trials Unit at Saint
Louis University at 314-268-5448.
Established in 1836, Saint Louis University School of Medicine has the
distinction of awarding the first M.D. degree west of the Mississippi River.
Saint Louis University School of Medicine is a pioneer in geriatric medicine,
organ transplantation, chronic disease prevention, cardiovascular disease,
neurosciences and vaccine research, among others. The School of Medicine trains
physicians and biomedical scientists, conducts medical research, and provides
health services on a local, national and international level.
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