Experts
Describe a "New Era" in HIV Vaccine Research at the XVIII
International AIDS Conference
Scientific Advances and the Increasing Global Need for Effective
HIV Prevention Place a New Focus on HIV Vaccines in Vienna
Vienna,
Austria -- July 19, 2010 -- Significant new scientific advances in
HIV vaccine research, including the partial efficacy of a vaccine
regimen tested in Thailand and the discovery of new broadly neutralizing
antibodies against HIV, have focused renewed attention on the promise
of HIV vaccines at the XVIII International AIDS Conference. Inspired
by new scientific leads and the overwhelming need for improved HIV
prevention approaches, stakeholders of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise
meeting here today, called for a "new era" in HIV vaccine
research, marked by the rapid exploration of new research approaches
and increased collaboration and funding for HIV vaccine research and
development worldwide.
"With more than 2.7 million people worldwide newly infected with
HIV every year, the need for safe and effective HIV vaccines is greater
than ever," said Dr. Peter Piot, director of the Institute for
Global Health at Imperial College, and chair of the Global HIV Vaccine
Enterprise Council. "We are now in one of the richest phases
in HIV vaccine research since the beginning of the epidemic. Following
up on each of the most promising advances in HIV vaccine research
will require appropriate funding, high levels of collaboration and
information sharing and the full support of researchers and governments
around the world."
"The swift development of an AIDS vaccine depends on the close
cooperation of researchers and advocates working in a number of sectors
of society," said Dr. Seth Berkley, founder and chief executive
officer of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative. "For example,
academic researchers often have brilliant ideas, but it is through
partnership with industry that these ideas are translated into products
suitable for human use. Today, we are in the midst of a renaissance
in AIDS vaccine research: consider the recent discovery of a trove
of antibodies that neutralize a broad spectrum of HIV variants and
expose new targets for vaccine design. To take full advantage of such
discoveries, we must work together-and open our minds to new ideas
from outside the field."
Supporting improved collaboration, information sharing and scientific
priority-setting among HIV vaccine research organizations and funders
worldwide is the focus of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise. A new
Enterprise document released here, The Road to Prevention,
outlines the major scientific challenges for the field in this new
era of HIV vaccine research and includes clear recommendations to
accelerate research progress moving forward. The Global HIV Vaccine
Enterprise will also release a comprehensive Scientific Strategic
Plan for the field at the AIDS Vaccine 2010 conference this September
in Atlanta, USA.
"To enter a new era of HIV vaccine development we must unify
different stages of HIV vaccine research into a single scientific
agenda, increase rapid data sharing and research decision making and,
importantly, increase both the human and financial resources dedicated
to the HIV vaccine endeavor," said Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise
Executive Director, Dr. Alan Bernstein. "HIV vaccines are a vital
component of comprehensive efforts to control this epidemic, and our
commitment to research must reflect the central role a vaccine will
play in one day ending AIDS."
"Globally, HIV affects the poor, young people, women and girls
in greatly disproportionate numbers," said Dr. Helene Gayle,
president and CEO of CARE USA and chair of the U.S. Presidential Advisory
Council on HIV/AIDS. "A safe and effective HIV vaccine is essential
to improved human health and development worldwide. The commitment
to developing safe and effective vaccines against this epidemic must
remain a top priority for the United States and for every other nation
that can contribute funding, expertise and political and institutional
commitment to this cause."
Copies of The Road to Prevention are available at: www.vaccineenterprise.org/AIDS2010-Vienna.
About the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise
The
Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise is a unique alliance of independent
organizations around the world dedicated to accelerating the development
of a preventive HIV vaccine. The Enterprise, comprised of top research,
funding, advocacy and other stakeholder organizations, develops and
drives implementation of the Scientific Strategic Plan for HIV vaccine
development. Enterprise stakeholders set shared research agendas,
create new structures for information sharing, develop new tools to
harmonize global research efforts, and bring new organizations, expertise
and resources to the challenge. For more information, please visit
www.vaccineenterprise.org.