Oregon researchers developing a vaccine that has shown promise in preventing HIV infection in primates said on Wednesday they have been awarded a $25 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Eliminating the virus
Oregon Health & Science University scientists, in announcing the award, said they hope to develop a vaccine that not only prevents the HIV virus from infecting people exposed to it, but also eliminates the virus from those already infected.
The grant follows research published by the scientists seeking to show their vaccine candidate halting the transmission of, or eliminating altogether, a form of the virus in about half of more than 100 monkeys tested.
"In
effect, we helped better arm the hunters in the body to chase down and
kill an elusive viral enemy," lead researcher Louis Picker wrote in the
magazine Nature, which published lab results last year. "And we're quite
confident that this vaccine approach can work exactly the same way
against HIV in humans."
Read: Breakthrough in hunt for HIV vaccine
While the annual number of new HIV infections has declined in recent years, more than 35 million people globally were living with HIV and an estimated 2.1 million people were newly infected with the virus that causes AIDS last year, according to the World Health Organization.
Larger-scale testing
Although AIDS-related deaths have dropped in recent years due to antiretroviral drug therapy, some 1.5 million people still died from the disease last year, the organisation said.
Read: Breakthrough in hunt for HIV vaccine
While the annual number of new HIV infections has declined in recent years, more than 35 million people globally were living with HIV and an estimated 2.1 million people were newly infected with the virus that causes AIDS last year, according to the World Health Organization.
Larger-scale testing
Although AIDS-related deaths have dropped in recent years due to antiretroviral drug therapy, some 1.5 million people still died from the disease last year, the organisation said.
In the United States, the annual rate of diagnosis with HIV fell by a third between 2002 and 2011, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The
grant will be used over the next five years to establish whether the
vaccine can be used safely on humans in a clinical trial and to help
Picker develop a version of the vaccine suitable for larger-scale
testing, which is required to bring it to market and will take at least a
decade.
The grant will largely be used to develop the
preventative vaccine, which could also be used for therapeutic and
antiretroviral therapies, the university said in a statement.
The National Institutes of Health cited Picker's research among its "promising medical advances" of 2013, the researchers said.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation aims to eradicate the world's most deadly diseases and poverty.
Source: http://www.health24.com/Medical/HIV-AIDS/Disease-prevention/Gates-Foundation-awards-25-million-to-HIV-vaccine-research-20140904

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