New AIDS Vaccine ALVAC-AIDSVAX to Help Prevent AIDS

by Blue Crush | September 24, 2009 at 05:30 am
1151 views | 85 Recommendations | 7 comments

Videos

New AIDS Vaccine

see larger video

sourced by Blue Crush

New AIDS Vaccine

An experimental vaccine called ALVAC-AIDSVAX has been found to be over 31% effective in the prevention of AIDS, suggesting new hope and a breakthrough in the near future. 

The study was conducted on 16,000 volunteers in Bangkok, Thailand by the U.S. Military HIV Research Program and the Thailand Ministry of Public Health.  Although the results seem modest, it's very exciting news for the scientific community. 

From President and CEO Seth Berkley of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI),"It's the first demonstration that a candidate AIDS vaccine provides benefit in humans.  Until now, we've had evidence of feasibility for an AIDS vaccine in animal models.  Now, we've got a vaccine candidate that appears to show a protective effect in humans."

The vaccine — a combination of two previously unsuccessful vaccines — cut the risk of becoming infected with HIV by more than 31 percent in the world's largest AIDS vaccine trial of more than 16,000 volunteers in Thailand, researchers announced Thursday in Bangkok.
Today's news  marks a "scientific breakthrough" and an "historic milestone" in the AIDS communities, showing results in humans for the first time.

The results were barely significant on statistical grounds, perplexing for scientific reasons and unanticipated by most researchers. Nevertheless, the first positive results for an AIDS vaccine after two decades of experimentation was being called a milestone.

"Conceptually, we now know a vaccine is possible," said Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which paid for most of the six-year trial. "Whether the vaccine is going to look anything like this one I don't know. But at least we know it can be done."

Details of the $105 million study will be announced at a vaccine conference in Paris in October.

recommend Add a comment
2
Amy Judd

This is good news for sure

3
Vic De Zen

This is good news indeed no matter how you look at it.  While this will never be the weapon that wins our war against HIV and AIDs this is certainly a step in the appropriate direction.  Good news!

1
Pythiian1

This is good news. Hopefully, there will be other follow-up studies.

2
Anthony Hodges

Please E-mail me for how to ask my Doctor for the ALVC-AidsVAX Thank -U- and Bless -_- .

0
biologist

This is an experimental treatment, so you can't get it anywhere yet, besides the clinical trials. However, I wouldn't rush for it, it seems quite useless..

1
jazzyzazzy

Every breakthrough is worth a chance,for the ones who suffer badly from Aids.All we can do is hope.

0
Biologist

Sorry to burst the happy bubble, but the results looks anything but impressive. I am very sceptical about this becoming a real treatment. 

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

smkovalinsky
First Flagged at 5:33 AM, Sep 24, 2009 by smkovalinsky
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (85)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from