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AIDS Researchers Call for New International Effort
By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 27, 2003; 3:53 PM
Declaring that the two-decade search for a vaccine against
HIV-AIDS has fallen disturbingly short of its goals, the world's
leading researchers in the field called yesterday for an
international effort on the level of the Human Genome Project to
speed a breakthrough.
Writing in the journal Science, two dozen HIV-AIDS leadersurged
creation of a Global Vaccine Enterprise that would establish six to
10 new research centers around the world focused exclusively on an
AIDS vaccine, funded by new public and private money.
"Almost everyone involved in HIV vaccine development agrees that
there is an urgent need to create and evaluate systematically more
candidate vaccines," wrote the AIDS elite, including top U.S. and
international public health officials, two Nobel Prize winners,
corporate and foundation researchers, and activists representing
AIDS sufferers. "Despite the wide variety of conceptual approaches
to HIV vaccine design, the pace of development of new HIV vaccine
candidates needs to be accelerated."
One of the paper's authors, Seth Berkley, president of the
International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, was more direct in an
interview.
"It's more than 20 years since AIDS was diagnosed, and the amount
of money spent for a vaccine has been a global disgrace," he said.
"Yes, the science is very difficult. But unless the world really
pushes for an AIDS vaccine, we'll never know what is possible and
what is not."
The call for a major new approach to developing a vaccine comes
after years of minor successes and major disappointments in the lab
and in clinical trials. In the past two years, only seven possible
candidates for a vaccine have gone into human trials, and only one
entered phase III clinical testing for effectiveness. In February,
that once-promising effort-15 years in development-failed to show
significantly protective results among the more than 5,000 men and
women who took it.
It has been especially difficult to develop an AIDS vaccine,
because the virus mutates so quickly and because existing methods of
stimulating the immune system to make antibodies to kill the virus
have proven ineffective.
According to co-author Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, none of the 60 million
people who has contracted the virus has recovered on his own,
leading scientists to conclude that the body cannot produce
effective antibodies against it. Virtually all vaccines work by
introducing elements of a microbe or toxin into the body to cause it
to produce antibodies that protect against later infection.
According to the paper, about 45 million people will be infected
with the virus by 2010, with nearly 70 million deaths by 2020. Most
of the victims now are in poorer countries in Africa and Asia.
Berkley said that only 2 percent of global funds spent on
HIV-AIDS goes to developing a vaccine, which is the only way the
epidemic can be stopped. "Let's face it: Once the demand for
treatment grew and billions began flowing into that, the AIDS
vaccine has fallen way down the agenda," he said.
But the vaccine effort has been limited because large drug
companies, with the exception of Merck & Co. and Aventis Pasteur,
have not been particularly active in the field. Another author,
Peter Piot, executive director of the Joint United Nations Programme
on HIV-AIDS, said their absence "has to be seen as a major market
failure."
In calling for the creation of a global network of centers to
work on an AIDS vaccine, the paper's authors said they will need
help not only to discover a vaccine, but also to test and
manufacture it.
Co-author Lawrence Corey, of the HIV Vaccine Trials Network at
the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center at the University of
Washington, said one significant problem facing AIDS vaccine
researchers is that, because of a worldwide shortage of
manufacturing capacity, many months often pass before a potential
vaccine can be produced
He said some authors contended that a manufacturing facility
should be built as part of a renewed global effort; others proposed
paying for dedicated time on the production lines of drug makers.
Corey also said the global approach to an AIDS vaccine has
generally been to "hope that someone hits a grand slam. But we're
saying here that we're more likely to have success by a process of
small advances and the creation of vaccines that can help some
people, but not all."
The lead author on the paper is Richard Klausner, executive
director of global health for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
which has funded some of the largest AIDS vaccine projects around
the world. He said private organizations and governments must accept
most of the burden in the AIDS vaccine effort, and that the Gates
Foundation is willing to contribute more.
"Recent progress has actually shown us how hard this problem is
going to be," Klausner said in an interview. "Considering how great
the challenges are, I think it's going to be very difficult without
the type of international structure and effort we've outlined."
He said the authors will break into expanded working groups to
develop a "road map" for jump-starting and focusing the global
enterprise. He said the model of the Human Genome Project-in which
individual labs were spurred to work faster and more closely
together -- was appealing to the group.
In pressing for six to 10 AIDS vaccine centers around the world,
the paper looked to the Vaccine Research Center of the National
Institutes of Health as a model. The authors did not try to estimate
the cost of a global effort, but Fauci said the U.S. program has a
fiscal 2004 budget of $456 million, making it the leading force
internationally in AIDS vaccine research.
"Others are doing some significant work, and there are some who
we think should be doing more," he said. "What we're trying to do in
this paper is really catalyze the idea that we need a global
enterprise for an AIDS vaccine."
Among the co-authors on the paper were Nobel Prize-winning
biologist David Baltimore, president of the California Institute of
Technology; Nobel Prize winner Harold Varmus, a former NIH director
who is president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Julie L.
Gerberding, director of the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention; Donald P. Francis, president of VaxGen Inc.; and
researchers from France, England, India, South Africa and China.
© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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