AVAC Praises Thai AIDS Vaccine Trial Collaborators and Volunteers for Historic Study
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Contact: Mitchell Warren, +1 (914) 661-1536, mitchell@avac.org;
Kay Marshall, +1 (347) 249-6375
New York, NY, September 24, 2009 , "Today
marks an historic milestone
in the search for an AIDS vaccine; we now have
evidence that it is
possible to reduce the risk HIV infection with
a vaccine," said AVAC
executive director Mitchell Warren, reacting to
the results of the
first AIDS vaccine trial to ever show efficacy
at preventing HIV. "It
will take time and resources to fully analyze,
understand and validate
the data, but there is little doubt that this
finding will energize and
redirect the AIDS vaccine field as all of us
begin the hard work to
translate this landmark result into true public
health benefit."
"We congratulate the trial sponsors, scientific
collaborators and
partners who conducted this trial, and
especially want to thank the
more than 16,400 Thai men and women whose
altruism and commitment as
trial volunteers made this effort possible.
These volunteers and their
communities have made an inestimable
contribution to HIV prevention
research. We all owe them a debt of gratitude,"
Warren said. "As we
move forward in our search for vaccines and
other new HIV prevention
interventions, researchers will need the
collaboration of tens of
thousands more volunteers around the world in
additional trials. We are
confident that many more communities and
individuals will follow in
their footsteps."
As the trial team reported in Bangkok today,
the Thai prime-boost trial
found that rates of HIV infection were roughly
30 percent lower among
volunteers who received the vaccine versus
those who received the
placebo. This is the first evidence of an AIDS
vaccine providing any
level of protection against HIV infection.
Statistical analyses
presented as part of this initial announcement
support the validity of
the finding. It is important to remember that
the trial was a "test of
concept" study designed to identify initial
signs of promise in a
product. The trial sponsors and implementers,
led by the US Military
HIV Research Program and funded by the National
Institutes of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), have been
clear that additional
studies would be needed to further understand
any positive result.
There is now an imperative on the trial team
and the field as a whole
to determine what those steps will be and to
implement them with all
due haste. Additional analysis of the trial
data are expected to be
presented at the annual AIDS vaccine meeting
that will take place in
October.
The trial looked at vaccine impact on risk
of infection and on viral
load among vaccine and placebo recipients who
received the vaccine and
went on to acquire HIV. The vaccines themselves
are not capable of
causing infection. There was no evidence of an
impact on viral load, a
goal that has been embraced by many vaccine
stakeholders as more
realistic and attainable than an impact on risk
of infection.
"These results move us one step further along
in the marathon journey
of AIDS vaccine research that continues. They
also demonstrate that the
scientific process is remarkable and
unpredictable, and underscores the
need for testing strategies in human efficacy
trials. We look forward
to more data from the trial in the coming weeks
that will help guide
the decisions about the design of additional
trials of this strategy,
and the impact of this finding on broader AIDS
vaccine research,"
Warren said.
"AVAC calls on the trial sponsors, vaccine
manufacturers, researchers,
funders and others in the field to work
quickly, cooperatively and
boldly to translate these results into
development of a scientific
action plan, a plan for community engagement in
Thailand and around the
world, and a broader communication effort to
convey both the promise
and limitations of this result. Above all, we
must ensure that all
stakeholders, including private industry, which
played a critical role
in this trial, reaffirm their commitments to
work that will lead to
eventual access to an effective vaccine for
people around the world, "
Warren said.
The trial team and Thai collaborators held
extensive consultations to
determine next steps in various scenarios and
determined that a vaccine
effect of 50% or higher would trigger a
licensure application in
Thailand. This finding does not reach this
threshold. The same
consultations determined that a modest effect,
such as was reported
today, would trigger additional discussions
about the way forward.
These new consultations are an essential next
step and should include a
range of stakeholders including members of
communities that might use
such a vaccine.
Stakeholders within Thailand and around the
world must recognize and
rise to the challenge of explaining the promise
of this proof of
concept as well as the rationale for proceeding
with a thorough
consultative process and data analysis before
making any decisions
about future access.
It is important to note that the two vaccines
tested in the Thai trial
contain synthetic fragments of subtype E, one
of the most common HIV
strains circulating in Thailand and Southeast
Asia. The regimen also
contains subtype B, which is most common in
North America and Europe.
Therefore this result estimates the level of
protection conferred by a
vaccine that includes genetic fragments matched
to the common
circulating subtype. Scientists do not know
whether a vaccine that is
effective against the strains that are found in
a given geographical
area will also be effective in other areas and
against other strains of
HIV. The trial collaborators and other experts
are already planning
follow-up studies to confirm and elaborate on
this and other findings
from this trial.
"This is an astonishing
scientific achievement, well beyond the
expectations of many scientists. It starts a
new chapter in the search
for an HIV vaccine: to make highly protective
vaccines that can be made
available to all who need them. There is a
great deal of work to be
done on many fronts at once, and AVAC is fully
committed to hastening
that day. We need to enlist a larger number of
new vaccine advocates to
keep the process moving productively as quickly
as feasible," said Bill
Snow, an AIDS vaccine activist since 1991, and
a co-founder of AVAC in
1995.
There are also still other HIV vaccine
strategies in laboratory and
human testing. Furthermore, other HIV
prevention options, particularly
microbicides and pre-exposure prophylaxis, or
PrEP, are being tested in
efficacy trials which will yield results in the
next few years. In the
last few years, clinical trials have also shown
that medical male
circumcision can be effective at reducing the
risk of HIV infection in
heterosexual men.
"This step adds immensely to the drive for
comprehensive HIV
prevention," Warren added. "That means
perfecting methods and ensuring
access for all who need it to existing HIV
prevention and treatment
options, including male and female condoms,
behavior change counseling,
male circumcision, clean needles, harm
reduction and antiretroviral
drugs; ensuring continued research to find
effective new options,
including vaccines, microbicides, and PrEP; and
planning for
integrating these new interventions into
combination programs."
More information about the Thai trial results
is available on the AVAC
website at http://www.avac.org/thaitrial.htm.
Additional information
will be added as it becomes available.




