New Edition of Guidelines for Involving Communities in HIV Prevention Research Released at International AIDS Conference
Friday, July 23, 2010
AVAC Contact: Kay Marshall, +1-347-249-6375, kay@avac.org
UNAIDS
Contact: Saya Oka, +41 22 791 1697, okas@unaids.org
GPP Plays Critical
Role in Moving HIV Prevention Research Agenda
Forward
VIENNA – The draft
second edition of The Good Participatory
Practice (GPP) Guidelines for Biomedical HIV
Prevention Trials were released yesterday at
the International AIDS Conference in Vienna by
AVAC and UNAIDS. The GPP Guidelines aim to
provide trial funders, sponsors, and
implementers with systematic guidance on how to
effectively work with a range of stakeholders
as they design and conduct biomedical HIV
prevention trials.
The guidelines were
developed by AVAC and UNAIDS in consultation
with a broad range of global stakeholders who
have provided perspectives since the first
edition was published in 2007. AVAC and UNAIDS
are now seeking feedback on the draft second
edition from those with interest and expertise
in HIV prevention research until 31 October,
after which the final second edition will be
published.
Clinical trials are guided by
Good Clinical Practice, Good Laboratory
Practice, and other guidelines and regulations
that cover scientific and general ethical
conduct, but global guidelines had not existed
for community engagement before the first
publication of GPP.
“Recent
breakthroughs, including positive results from
the CAPRISA 004 microbicide trial, have
reenergized prevention research, and around the
world, thousands of research participants and
hundreds of researchers and trial site staff
are working together find new HIV prevention
options. Thousands more will be needed as we
work to find new solutions to ending the AIDS
epidemic," said Mitchell Warren, executive
director of AVAC.
“The GPP Guidelines
were developed to fill an important gap in the
conduct of biomedical HIV prevention research
and to help research teams, trial sponsors,
trial funders, communities, advocates, and
other stakeholders plan, implement, and
evaluate community engagement in trials, reduce
unnecessary conflict and ensure that research
is meaningful to both communities and trial
implementers,” Warren added.
“AVAC
and UNAIDS is pleased to release this new
version of the GPP guidelines at the conference
at which the groundbreaking results of the
CAPRISA tenofovir microbicide gel trial have
been presented, recalling that it was the
stopping of antiretroviral pre-exposure
prophylaxis trials in 2004 that first inspired
the development of the GPP guidelines,” said
Dr. Catherine Hankins, UNAIDS’ chief
scientific adviser.
The GPP guidelines
include:
- Guiding Principles of GPP that serve as the foundation of the relationship between trial funders, sponsors, implementers, and other stakeholders.
- GPP Standards that trial funders, sponsors, and implementers should follow when designing, preparing for, conducting, and concluding a biomedical HIV prevention trial.
The GPP Guidelines are available online at: www.avac.org/gppdocuments or www.unaids.org.




