& Medicine NY Conference Focuses on AIDS Vaccine Development
Joe De Capua
At the AIDS Vaccine 2003 Conference in New York,Thursday,
there's a call for faster and broader testing of experimental vaccines.
More than 1,200 people from 50 countries have gathered for the meeting.
With an estimated 44-million people living with
HIV-AIDS, researchers say only a vaccine can halt the high rate of infection.
But a successful vaccine remains years away.
Duke University's Dr. Barton Haynes is one of
the conference organizers "As much as scientific research has accomplished
over the last few years, much more needs to be done. Clearly, we're
still far from the development of a completely protective and practical
vaccine."
Salim Karim, a leading vaccine researcher at
the University of Natal, says everyday without a vaccine allows the
pandemic to stretch further. "In the three days that we will be
in this conference, 24,000 of my fellow countrymen in South Africa will
become infected with HIV."
But Dr. Karim says there is some encouraging
news. He says vaccine testing has taken on a much more global hue. For
example, trials are underway in Trinidad, Brazil, Botswana, Uganda,
Kenya and Thailand. And more countries, such as China and India, are
developing their own vaccines.
He says there are three basic reasons why it
has been difficult to come up with a successful AIDS vaccine especially
one that would work in developing countries. One is the who, what, when,
why, where and how of the pandemic otherwise called epidemiology.
"The first is that the epidemiology of
HIV is dramatically different in these settings. If you take Southern
Africa, most of the people becoming infected are young and they are
women. If you take just my own country in South Africa, there are twice
as many women who are becoming infected with HIV as there are men."
The second problem he says is there are many
different sub-types of HIV and they can vary from region to region.
Finally, he says peoples' genetic make-up may determine whether a particular
vaccine works for them.
The conference runs through Sunday, September
21.
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