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May 20, 2003
International News
Botswana to Begin Trials for San
Diego-Made AIDS Vaccine on Humans
Associated Press
05.19.03; Sello Motseta
Botswana is set to begin tests on an AIDS vaccine to determine if
it is safe when given to healthy adults, officials said Monday. The
experimental vaccine has already been successfully tested on mice
and rabbits, and will be tested to determine the immune responses of
healthy adults when the drug is given at different doses, according
to the Botswana Harvard AIDS Partnership for HIV Research and
Education.
The vaccine, known as EP HIV-1090, activates the CD8 or killer T
cells in the immune system to destroy HIV-infected cells. The drug
is manufactured by San Diego-based Epimmune.
The study is scheduled to last 18 months and will involve 42
HIV-negative volunteers from Botswana and the United States. The
trials form the first phase of the process "to see if the vaccine is
safe and well tolerated in humans," said Dr. Tony Villafana, the
research site director. Only subjects with high levels of the
protein leukocyte antigen, or HLA, will be included in the study
because HLA is found to be most responsive to the treatment.
Botswana is the first African country to commit to a widespread
program of providing AIDS treatment through its public health
system. The diamond-rich nation has the highest HIV-infection rate
in the world, with an HIV prevalence rate of 19 percent out of
Botswana's 1.7 million people. Approximately 38 percent of the adult
population is infected.
The Botswana Center of Human Rights says the fact that there is
no local law governing the way in which clinical trials are
conducted on humans is troubling, however. "We are just concerned
that people should be able to make an informed decision about
participating in vaccine trials, that they are fully aware of the
implications," said the center's director, Alice Mogwe.
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