| Literature DB >> 26344345 |
Abstract
When HIV was discovered and established as the cause of AIDS in 1983-1984, many people believed that a vaccine would be rapidly developed. However, 30 years have passed and we are still struggling to develop an elusive vaccine. In trying to achieve that goal, different scientific paradigms have been explored. Although major progress has been made in understanding the scientific basis for HIV vaccine development, efficacy trials have been critical in moving the field forward. Major lessons learned are: the development of an HIV vaccine is an extremely difficult challenge; the temptation of just following the fashion should be avoided; clinical trials are critical, especially large-scale efficacy trials; HIV vaccine research will require long-term commitment; and sustainable collaborations are needed to accelerate the development of an HIV vaccine. Concrete actions must be implemented with the sense of urgency imposed by the severity of the AIDS epidemic.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV; HIV vaccines; clinical trials; lessons learned
Year: 2013 PMID: 26344345 PMCID: PMC4494212 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines1040513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Key events on the history of HIV vaccine research and development.
| Year | Scientific Progress | Clinical trials | Organizational aspects |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1983–1985 | HIV identified as the cause of AIDS; rapid advances in the molecular biology of HIV; experimental HIV infection of chimpanzees; first SIV isolated; neutralizing antibodies described. | US Secretary of Health “predicts” clinical trials of HIV vaccines in two years. | |
| 1986 | Laboratory development of vaccinia vectors for HIV. | First HIV vaccine trial in the world (by Daniel Zagury, in Zaire). | Starting of the neutralizing antibody paradigm wave; NIH establishes the Division of AIDS (DAIDS); First “Cent Gardes” meeting in France. |
| 1987 | HIV Envelope glycoproteins identified as targets of neutralizing antibodies. | Launching of the UK Directed AIDS Research Programme. | |
| 1988 | Initial description of R5 and X4 virus phenotypes. | First HIV vaccine trial in the US (recombinant gp160, MicroGeneSys); Second HIV vaccine trial in the US (gp160 in a vaccinia vector, BMS/Oncogen). | NIH establishes the Office of AIDS Research (OAR); launching of NIH AIDS Vaccine Evaluation Group (AVEG). |
| 1989 | Monkey protection experiments with whole inactivated SIV (later found to be mediated by host antigens). | ||
| 1990 | V3 loop “identified” as Principal Neutralization Domain (PND); Chimpanzee protection with envelope vaccines; development of SHIV. | WHO establishes HIV Vaccine Advisory Committee (selection of international vaccine evaluation sites in Brazil, Rwanda, Thailand and Uganda). | |
| 1991 | Identification and classification of HIV clades (subtypes). | ||
| 1992 | Development of live attenuated (nef-deleted) SIV vaccines; DNA immunization reported; isolation of first broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibody (bnmAb). | French ANRS vaccine program, focusing on ALVAC (canarypox) candidate vaccines; WHO establishes Network for HIV Isolation and Characterization; First National Plan for HIV Vaccine Development in Thailand | |
| 1993 | First clinical trial with an ALVAC vector; clinical trials of V3 peptide vaccine in the US and China (UBI). | NIH “HIV Network for Prevention Trials” (HIVNET); NIH “Preparation for AIDS Vaccine Evaluation” (PAVE); review of NIH HIV vaccine activities. | |
| 1994 | Initial suggestion that HIV clades may define immunotypes; finding that antibodies induced by vaccines do not neutralize primary isolates. | First trial in Thailand with a V3 peptide vaccine (UBI). | |
| 1995 | R5/X4 phenotype explained by HIV binding to second receptor (CXCR4/CCR5). | First trial in Thailand of a gp120 vaccine. | Establishment of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC). |
| 1996 | Publication of the NIH Levine Report; establishment of the NIH AIDS Vaccine Research Committee (the Baltimore Committee); launching of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI). | ||
| 1997 | President Clinton challenge to develop an HIV vaccine in 10 years. | ||
| 1998 | First crystal structure of gp120. | Initiation of phase III vaccine trial in the US (gp120 BB, VAX004, VaxGen). | |
| 1999 | Live-attenuated SIV found to cause disease in newborn monkeys. | Initiation of phase III vaccine trial in Thailand (gp120BE, VAX003, VaxGen); initiation of phase I clinical trials in Uganda with an ALVAC vector. | Establishment of the US HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN); launching of the NIH Vaccine Research Center (VRC); establishment of the South African AIDS Vaccine Initiative (SAAVI). |
| 2000 | Conception of the African AIDS Vaccine Programme (AAVP); first AIDS Vaccine Conference (Paris) | ||
| 2003 | Negative results of phase III VaxGen gp120 trials; initiation of RV144 trial in Thailand. | End of the antibody paradigm and beginning of the CMI/CTL paradigm; proposal to establish the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise. | |
| 2004 | Introduction of repeat low-dose mucosal challenge in NHP. | Initiation of STEP trial in the US (Ad 5 vector). | |
| 2005 | Launching of the NIH-funded Center for HIV Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI). | ||
| 2006 | Launching of the Gates-supported Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery (CAVD). | ||
| 2007 | Initiation of Phambili trial in South Africa (Ad5 vector); stopping of the STEP and Phambili trial for lack of efficacy. | End of the CTL paradigm and beginning of the current wave aimed at inducing more complex immune responses. | |
| 2009 | A plethora of novel broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnmAb) began to be reported. | RV144 trial reveals 31.2% efficacy; initiation of HVTN 505 (DNA + Ad 5 vector). | |
| 2011 | Description of early control of SIV using a Rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV) vectored vaccine that elicits effector memory cells. | Launching of the AIDS Vaccine for Asia Network (AVAN). | |
| 2012 | Description of subunit organization of membrane-bound HIV trimer; new insights on the mechanism for development of broadly neutralizing antibodies; report of immune correlates in RV144. | ||
| 2013 | Stopping of HVTN 505 for lack of efficacy. | 13th and last AIDS Vaccine Conference (Barcelona) |