http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1727-2002Feb25.html
U.S.
Decides Not to Expand Key Study of AIDS Vaccine
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By Rick Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 26, 2002; Page A02
The AIDS vaccine regimen, one of many at various stages of testing in the
United States and abroad, involves an initial "primer" shot made by
Aventis Pasteur followed by a "booster" vaccine made by VaxGen of
Brisbane, Calif.
Researchers had hoped that the federally funded study would shed light on
which components of the immune system are most effective at fighting HIV, the
virus that causes AIDS. But results to date indicate that by one key measure,
at least, the vaccine is not potent enough to answer that question, said
Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, which has been funding the study.
That does not mean the U.S. government has lost faith in the vaccine
combination, Fauci and others said. A nearly identical regimen, with components
made by the same two companies, has a good chance of being expanded into a
large-scale, federally funded test in Thailand next year, health officials said
yesterday.
That vaccine combination was already under study by the Department of
Defense. The program is to be shifted to the National Institutes of Health as
part of a large-scale transfer of AIDS vaccine research from the military to
the civilian sector.
The reorganization, ordered last month by the Office of Management and
Budget, calls for oversight and administration of the Defense Department's AIDS
research and development program to be transferred to the NIH from its current
location in the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command. The move
effectively consolidates within the NIH all federal AIDS vaccine research,
which until now has been conducted by NIH and the Defense Department on two
parallel -- and according to some critics, sometimes redundant -- tracks.
Despite years of research, scientists do not know which component of the
immune system is best able to kill HIV -- information that could help them
design more effective vaccines. The "prime-boost" vaccine study known
to the AIDS community as HVTN 203 had sought to answer that question but now
appears unlikely to do so, Fauci said, because the study design had counted on
a more robust effect than has been seen in volunteers.
But a differently designed study with a similar vaccine has a good chance of
being expanded to include large numbers of volunteers in Thailand, Fauci said.
That study seeks to answer a simpler question -- "Does the vaccine help
prevent HIV infection?" -- without trying to settle the question of how it
may be providing that protection.
A large study of the VaxGen vaccine by itself is already underway in
Thailand.
© 2002
The Washington Post Company
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