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Commentary: Correlates of HIV Immune Protection: Key To AIDS Vaccine?

AIDSWEEKLY Plus, 12 Aug 1996
Daniel J. DeNoon, Senior Editor


Do you have to know what you are looking for before you can find it?

Nobody knows what kinds of immune responses protect people against HIV infection and/or HIV disease. But the following stories in this issue represent the world's best efforts to find out.

The best way to determine the correlates of HIV immune protection are clinical efficacy trials. Indeed, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved other vaccines, such as the acellular pertussis vaccine and the live oral typhoid vaccine, even though the correlates of protection against these diseases have never been identified.

"I always laugh when I hear that we can't do an efficacy trial because the correlates of protection are not known," Karen Goldenthal, director of vaccines and related product applications for the FDA's Center for Biologicals Evaluation and Research (CBER), recently said (AIDS Weekly, April 10, 1995). "Of course they are not known: they can only be determined in an efficacy trial."

The current debate over the testing of candidate HIV vaccines focuses not on whether to conduct efficacy trials, but on their focus and on how large they should be.

"Ten [vaccine recipients] carefully analyzed may teach us more than 100 studied perfunctorily," said John Moore of New York's Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center at the recent XI International Conference on AIDS.

"For the next few years, the emphasis should be on analysis of the consequences of immunization, including breakthrough infections, and not on definitive endpoints of efficacy."

To facilitate analysis of trial data, an interpretive context is essential. To provide this context, researchers around the world looked in four places for insights into the correlates of immunity to HIV:

The articles that follow are reports of presentations made during a session of the 1996 XI International Conference on AIDS entitled "Vaccines: Are Correlates of Protection?"

The various studies approach the question from different directions, and sometimes yield conflicting data. But when the time comes to assess the results of HIV vaccine efficacy trials or to design improved vaccines, these groundbreaking studies will prove invaluable.

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Copyright © 1996 - Charles Henderson, Publisher. All rights Reserved. Permission to reproduce granted to AEGIS by Charles W. Henderson. Authorization to reproduce for personal use granted granted by C. W. Henderson, Publisher, provided that the fee of US$4.50 per copy, per page is paid directly to the Copyright Clearance Center, 27 Congress Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970, USA.


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©1996. AEGiS.