14/01/2012
A team of Spanish researchers say
they have developed a therapeutic vaccine that can temporarily break growth of
the HIV virus in infected patients.
The vaccine, based on immune
cells exposed to HIV that had been inactivated with heat, was tested on a group
of 36 people carrying the virus and the results were the best yet recorded for
such a treatment, the team said.
Felipe Garcia, one
of the scientists in the team at Barcelona University’s Hospital Clinic said: “What
we did was give instructions to the immune system so it could learn to destroy
the virus, which it does not do naturally”.
The therapeutic vaccine, a shot
that treats an existing disease rather than preventing it, was safe and led to
a dramatic drop in the amount of HIV virus detected in some patients, said the
study published on January 2, 2013 in Science Translation Medicine.
After 12 weeks of the trial, the
HIV viral load dropped by more than 90 percent among 12 of the 22 patients who
received the vaccine. Only one among the 11 patients who received a control
injection without the vaccine experienced a similar result.
After 24 weeks, the effectiveness
had begun to decline, however, with seven of the 20 remaining patients
receiving the vaccine enjoying a similar 90-percent slump in viral load. No-one
in the control group of 10 patients experienced such a decline in the virus.
The vaccine lost its
effectiveness after a year, when the patients had to return to their regular
combination therapy of anti-retroviral drugs.
Researchers said the results were
similar to those achieved with a single anti-retroviral drug, used to block the
growth of HIV.
“It is the most solid
demonstration in the scientific literature that a therapeutic vaccine is
possible,” they said in a statement.
The vaccine allowed patients
temporarily to live without taking multiple medicines on a daily basis, which
created hardship for patients, could have toxic side-effects over the long term
and had a high financial price, the team said.
“This investigation opens the
path to additional studies with the final goal of achieving a functional cure -
the control of HIV replication for long periods or an entire life without
anti-retroviral treatment,” the researchers said in a statement.
“Although we still have not got a
functional cure, the results published today open the possibility of achieving
an optimal therapeutic vaccine, or a combination of strategies that includes a
therapeutic vaccine, and could help to reach that goal,” they said.
The team said it took seven years
to get to this point, and the researchers would now work on improving the
vaccine and combining it with other therapeutic vaccines over the next three or
four years.
According to latest UN figures,
the number of people infected by HIV worldwide rose to 34 million in 2011 from
33.5 million in 2010.
AFP
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