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U.S. agency vows to back AIDS study

Researchers gather to regroup after failure of key vaccine trials

March 26, 2008|By Chris Emery , SUN REPORTER

That approach was based on using a cold virus to deliver the anti-AIDS payload to those inoculated with the vaccine.

Still, Fauci characterized the AIDS Healthcare Foundation's position as "radical" and said that the Merck vaccine was only one of many promising avenues of research.

He acknowledged, however, that his agency might have to shift emphasis from large clinical trials on humans to more basic research on monkeys into the mechanisms by which HIV infects the body and overwhelms the immune system.

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A number of other studies on vaccine candidates similar to Merck's have been halted or postponed, including PAVE 100, a large federal trial that has been put off until at least midyear. Fauci said his agency had not decided on that trial's future.

Earlier this week, Robert Gallo, director of the University of Maryland's Institute of Human Virology and co-discoverer of the virus that causes AIDS, compared the outcome of the Merck studies to the space shuttle Challenger disaster.

Gallo defended his comments yesterday, saying that he made the comparison because both situations involved huge sums of government funding and major failures.

"I wanted to foster this kind of discussion because I knew we were going to be attacked, and sure enough we're getting attacked," he said, referring to calls for an end to vaccine research.

The meeting in Bethesda was a soul-searching exercise for the AIDS research community and a way for the federal agency that funds the research to solicit suggestions for the future.

"With as much disappointment as we have ... the path forward is the focus," said Dr. Adel Mahmoud, a professor at Princeton University and co-chair of the summit. "The status quo and finger-pointing isn't going to take us anywhere."

A common sentiment: The discipline needs a booster shot of young scientists with new ideas.

Fauci said his agency would try to set aside an additional $10 million to $20 million next year to fund grants to look into new ideas. About one-third of the NIAID's $2.9 billion budget goes to HIV vaccine research.

Others cautioned against overreacting to the failure of Merck's experimental vaccine, noting that scientific inquiry often leads to dead ends before it leads to fruitful discoveries.

Hamilton Richardson, a West Baltimore man who is HIV-negative but has participated in vaccine research, said he attended the summit to urge the gathered researchers to continue their search for a vaccine.

"When Challenger blew up, did we stop going into space?" he said, referring to Gallo's remarks. "No, we're in space right now."

chris.emery@baltsun.com

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