Turning the Page to a New Era in HIV Prevention Research: AVAC Report warns promising developments in biomedical HIV prevention could be undermined by current conditions of the global AIDS response
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
For immediate
release: July 14, 2010
Contacts:
Mitchell Warren, +1 (914) 661-1536,
mitchell@avac.org / Kay Marshall,
+1-347-249-6375, kay@avac.org
New York, NY, 14
July 2010 – A new report from AVAC
surveys the state of biomedical HIV prevention
research, including the first evidence of
vaccine-induced protection in humans and the
emergence of ARV-based prevention—and
provides strategic recommendations for moving
forward in a time of constrained resources and
faltering commitment to ending AIDS.
Turning the Page, AVAC’s 13th
annual report on the state of the HIV
prevention research field, offers unique
context and a timely critique for issues that
will be center stage at the upcoming AIDS 2010
Conference in Vienna. These issues are also
central to the AIDS response outlined in the
first ever US National HIV/AIDS Strategy,
released Tuesday.
As the report
describes, scientific developments in several
arenas of biomedical prevention research have
re-energized the search for additional
strategies. In the vaccine field this includes
the first evidence of vaccine-induced
protection and strides in identification of new
potent, HIV-specific neutralizing antibodies.
Antiretroviral-based prevention also shows
potential, and the report provides context for
the upcoming results of the CAPRISA 004
microbicide trial, the first effectiveness
trial of an ARV-based prevention strategy in
HIV-negative people.
The biomedical
prevention research field must now develop
strategies for pursuing new scientific leads
and following through on promising developments
without the guarantee of expanded financial
resources. In addition, the implications of
recent breakthroughs need to be explained
clearly to diverse audiences. As the report
describes, the next phase of human clinical
trials will involve complex designs and
questions, and their success will depend on the
support of all stakeholder groups. It will be
difficult to execute this ambitious research
agenda in the context of fiscal
constraint—and the field needs to address
this head on.
“We face yawning gaps
in funding for proven prevention and treatment
and a crisis in financial and political
will,” said Mitchell Warren, AVAC Executive
Director. “There is skepticism about whether
disease-specific funding for AIDS is cost
effective and skepticism about whether limited
funds for AIDS should include funding for AIDS
prevention research.”
“The recent
report from UNAIDS that proven HIV prevention
is having a demonstrable impact on the epidemic
in many African countries is good news. But to
really have an impact on the epidemic we need
additional funding and political commitments
for AIDS treatment and prevention programs AND
more funding for HIV prevention research,”
Warren added.
“The AVAC Report makes
the critical point that to capitalize on recent
breakthroughs in HIV prevention, we must find
smart and innovative ways to make the best use
of available funding,” said Chris Collins,
AVAC Board Member and Vice President and
Director, Public Policy at amfAR, The
Foundation for AIDS Research.
The HIV
prevention research field has been buoyed by
major breakthroughs in recent months and
Turning the Page calls for researchers, funders
and others to prioritize collaboration and
nimble and adaptive planning for replenishing
the pipeline with new products and designing
clinical trials that will yield the most
information to move the field
forward.
In recent years, the HIV
prevention research agenda has broadened beyond
vaccines and microbicides to include
antiretroviral-based prevention, including
pre-exposure prophylaxis, and, more recently,
efforts to understand the role of treatment as
prevention. At the same time, HIV treatment
programs—once thought to be impossible to
implement in developing countries—have
expanded to reach millions of people around the
world.
“The HIV prevention research
agenda must take into account the new realities
of the fight against AIDS. We believe that new
prevention programs cannot be built while
current treatment programs are faltering,”
Warren said. “To reach the goal of universal
access to healthcare—which includes
comprehensive AIDS treatment and
prevention—advocates, researchers, health
care providers, funders and policy makers must
speak with one voice.”
Turning the
Page lays out the critical components of
a response to AIDS that unites treatment and
prevention, including:
- Sustain and expand current treatment and care programs: Funding restrictions are beginning to take a damaging toll on AIDS treatment programs at the precise moment that data are emerging to show that ARV treatment prevents deaths, lowers health care costs and can reduce the risk of HIV transmission. Donors and policy makers must take the critical steps needed to forestall further damage and put treatment programs back on track.
- Actively explore treatment as prevention: There is compelling evidence that earlier initiation of antiretrovirals in HIV-positive people can reduce the risk that they will infect sexual partners with HIV. Additional data will come from an ongoing clinical trial, but the world should begin exploring the practical approaches and implications of scaling up HIV treatment as prevention that can help guide policy makers’ decision-making about potential introduction of treatment as prevention when the data become available.
- Plan for ARV-based prevention: Neither oral PrEP nor topical ARV-based microbicides have yet been proven to have benefit. But, if they do, they will need to be delivered strategically, in programs that provide clear, integrated messages about the risks and benefits of ARVs for prevention in HIV-negative people. Results from CAPRISA 004, the first ARV-based microbicide effectiveness trial, will be delivered next week at AIDS 2010 and results from initial PrEP effectiveness trials are expected in the next 12 months. The field needs to be prepared to address the many questions that will emerge from these results and develop rational plans for ensuring the best use of the potential new options.
“We must also be ready to be surprised. The greatest advances in the fight against AIDS have come about because people and institutions refused to accept conventional wisdom about what was possible,” Warren said. “In 15 years of advocating for AIDS vaccines, we at AVAC have witnessed many moments when an AIDS vaccine was deemed a scientific impossibility. Yet, a trial that had been all but discounted by many provided evidence that a preventive AIDS vaccine is possible. And AIDS treatment programs and their clients have flourished in every possible context around the globe in the face of those who said it was impossible.”
“Now is the best time to invest in an expanded response to the AIDS epidemic. AVAC stands with the global community of advocates for HIV prevention, treatment, research and implementation to expect and demand an extraordinary response to this unprecedented epidemic—our only hope of closing the book on AIDS,” Warren added.
Turning the Page and other AVAC publications, including an upcoming report on anticipating the results of ARV-based prevention trials are available online at www.avac.org.
Founded in 1995 as the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, AVAC is an international non-profit organization that uses education, policy analysis, advocacy, and community mobilization to accelerate the ethical development and eventual global delivery of AIDS vaccines and other new HIV prevention options as part of a comprehensive response to the pandemic.




