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AIDS VACCINE?
LA JOLLA- While a successful AIDS vaccine continues to elude
researchers, several new developments suggest progress is being
made towards fulfilling what remains one of the key goals of
medical research.
A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee has now
recommended that an AIDS vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk
undergo further clinical trials. The Vaccine and Related
Biological Products Advisory Committee based its decision on the
results of preliminary clinical trials with the vaccine.
Pending final FDA approval, the new trials would involve
about 1,000 patients. The clinical trials, would be double-blind
and adjuvant-controlled to study
surrogate markers and clinical endpoints in large patient
populations.
The trials would be divided into two groups: (1) patients with
CD4
T cell counts above 550 per cubic millimeter of blood, and (2)
those
with CD4 T cell counts between 300 and 549.
The FDA decision appears to be something of a vindication
for Dr. Salk. It was three years ago at the International AIDS
Conference in Amsterdam when Dr. Salk first proposed an
alternative hypothesis on the pathogenesis of HIV disease, and
suggested a contrarian approach to developing an AIDS vaccine. At
the time, most leading researchers dismissed his ideas out of
hand. Dr. Salk went ahead with his own studies anyway. The next
year at the International AIDS Conference in Berlin, Dr. Salk
presented the first clinical results of his vaccine to a capacity
crowd, while other researchers also reported findings which
appeared to provide support for the Salk approach.
Dr. Salk maintains that it may be more effective to prime
the cell mediated side of the immune response rather than attempt
to modulate the humoral immune response to HIV. The goal of this
approach would be to inhibit the progression of disease in
patients already infected with the virus
The Salk immunogen is based on a killed HIV preparation with
the gp-120 envelope protein depleted, in an Incomplete Freunds
Adjuvant. HIV positive patients receiving the immunogen in a
preliminary clinical trial demonstrated significant increases in
humoral and cell mediated immunity, as well as decreases in viral
burden, compared to those receiving placebo.
"This study confirms that the immune system can be
manipulated and that this immunogen does produce an immune
response, including an effect on HIV infected cells. The field of
AIDS vaccine research is wide open and we now have ample reason
to go forward with our research," said Jonas Salk, M.D., Founder
of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA., at
the time.
In another AIDS vaccine development, researchers at the
National Institutes of Health announced the development of a
genetically altered version of HIV containing a "suicide gene".
The researchers inserted an extra gene from the herpes virus into
the HIV genome. The strategy proposed by the researchers would
involve giving patients the attenuated form of the virus to prime
the immune response, then give the patients ganciclovir, a potent
anti-herpes drug to selectively destroy the modified AIDS virus.
Considerable basic research will be needed before that
approach is ready for clinical trials, emphasized Dr. Stephen
Smith of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, at a conference of the American Society of
Microbiology.
Several recent studies involving patients with apparent
immunity to HIV are also causing optimism among vaccine
developers. Another group of researchers is about to begin a
trial using a gene therapy-based vaccine. In addition, large
scales trials with subunit vaccines based on the envelope protein
of HIV are expected to begin in Africa within the next year or
two. (See stories in Science Update)
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