TheButler
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Post at 17-7-2012 01:10  Profile P.M. 
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Excellent! BBFS Here I Come!!

Scientist report a vaccine against HIV is nearly within reach . . . again . . . one more time . . .   seriously, it sounds more real this time:

http://www.reuters.com/www.reute ... USBRE86E09C20120715

Now there's nothing left to worry about!  Just genital warts, maybe herpes, the occasional oozing chancre, antibiotic resistant clap, drug resistant TB, hepatitis B & C, you know, minor stuff.




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TheButler
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Post at 17-7-2012 01:12  Profile P.M. 
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Reply #1 TheButler's post

Here's the whole article:


(Reuters) - At an ill-fated press conference in 1984, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler boldly predicted an effective AIDS vaccine would be available within just two years.

But a string of failed attempts - punctuated by a 2007 trial in which a Merck vaccine appeared to make people more vulnerable to infection, not less - cast a shadow over AIDS vaccine research that has taken years to dispel.

A 2009 clinical trial in Thailand was the first to show it was possible to prevent HIV infection in humans. Since then, discoveries have pointed to even more powerful vaccines using HIV-fighting antibodies. Now scientists believe a licensed vaccine is within reach.

"We know the face of the enemy," said Dr. Barton Haynes, of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and recent director of the Center for HIV AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI). The research consortium was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), founded in 2005 by the National Institutes of Health to identify and overcome roadblocks in the design of vaccines for the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS. NIAID's funding of CHAVI ended in June.

Unlike many viruses behind infectious disease, HIV is a moving target, constantly spitting out slightly different versions of itself, with different strains affecting different populations around the world. The virus is especially pernicious since it attacks the immune system, the very mechanism the body needs to fight back.

"The virus is far more crafty than we ever thought," said Haynes, who will outline progress in vaccine research at the International AIDS Society's 2012 conference being held in Washington from July 22-27.

FIRST SIGN OF HOPE

Thanks to drugs that can control the virus for decades, AIDS is no longer a death sentence. New infections have fallen by 21 percent since the peak of the pandemic in 1997 and advances in prevention - through voluntary circumcision programs, prevention of mother-to-child transmission and early treatment - promise to cut that rate even more.

Still, as many as 34 million people are infected with HIV worldwide. And with 2.7 million new infections in 2010 alone, experts say a vaccine is still the best hope for eradicating AIDS.

Teams have been working on a vaccine for nearly three decades, but it wasn't until RV144, the 2009 clinical trial involving more than 16,000 adults in Thailand, that researchers achieved any hint of success.

The test of a combination of two vaccines followed several big failures, including the stunning news that Merck's vaccine may have increased the risk of infection among men who were both uncircumcised and had prior exposure to the virus used in the vaccine.

"It had an extremely chilling effect on the whole field," said Colonel Nelson Michael, director of the U.S. Military HIV Research Program at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, which led the RV144 trial.

The Thai study tested Sanofi's ALVAC, a weakened canary pox virus used to sneak three HIV genes into the body, and AIDSVAX, a vaccine originally made by Roche Holding's Genentech that carried an HIV surface protein.

Both vaccines had poor showings in individual trials. Researchers were so convinced the Thai trial would fail that 22 scientists wrote an editorial in Science calling it a waste of money.

Then came the shocker. Results of the study published in 2009 showed the vaccine combination cut HIV infections by 31.2 percent. According to Michael and many other experts, the result was not big enough to be considered effective, but its impact on researchers was huge, says Wayne Koff, chief scientific officer of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) based in New York.

An extensive analysis of the Thai trial published this year in the New England Journal of Medicine offered clues about why some volunteers responded.

The study, led by Haynes, scientists at Walter Reed and 25 other institutions, found men and women who were vaccinated made antibodies to a specific region of the virus's outer coat, suggesting this region provides an important vaccine target.

Preparations are under way for a follow-up trial testing beefed-up versions of the vaccines among heterosexuals in South Africa and men who have sex with men in Thailand.

Once again, the trial will use a Sanofi vaccine, but instead of AIDSVAX, researchers will use a different vaccine candidate with a boosting agent from Novartis.

Michael said it has been a major effort to secure new research partners and funding, including support from host countries, as well as to persuade rivals Novartis and Sanofi to work together. The teams still need to retool the vaccines to work in South Africa, where the strain of HIV is different.

"We're really working as fast as we can," said Michael, who expects large-scale effectiveness studies to start in 2016.

The hope is to have at least 50 percent effectiveness, a level that mathematical modelers say could have a major impact on the epidemic. Michael thinks this might be the pathway for getting the first HIV vaccine licensed, possibly by 2019.

Vaccine experts are equally excited about a vaccine that Michael's team is developing with Harvard University and Johnson & Johnson's Crucell unit, which uses weakened versions of a common cold virus and a smallpox virus.

A study published in February showed this vaccine protected monkeys from a virulent strain of HIV. Animals that did become infected after repeated exposure also had low levels of virus in their blood. Safety studies in human patients are just starting, with large-scale efficacy studies slated for 2016.

NEXT-GENERATION VACCINES

The current crop of vaccines is largely designed to train immune system cells known as T-cells to recognize and kill cells already infected with HIV. While these trials progress, scientists are working on even more advanced vaccines that activate powerful antibodies to prevent HIV from infecting cells in the first place. Both would be administered before a person becomes exposed to the virus.

Most modern vaccines use this antibody approach, but HIV's extreme skill at mutating makes it difficult for specifically targeted antibodies to identify and neutralize the virus.

Teams led by Dr. Dennis Burton of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, Dr. Michel Nussenzweig at Rockefeller University in New York, Dr. Gary Nabel of NIAID's Vaccine Research Center, Haynes at Duke and others have focused on rare antibodies made by 10 to 20 percent of people with HIV that can neutralize a broad array of strains.

Researchers think a vaccine that can coax the body into making these antibodies before HIV exposure would offer a powerful foil to many forms of the virus.

Such antibodies seek out and latch on to regions of the virus that are highly "conserved," meaning they are so critical to the virus that they appear in nearly every HIV strain. By attaching to the virus they make it incapable of infecting other cells.

Until 2009, scientists had identified only a few broadly neutralizing antibodies, but in the past few years teams have found dozens.

So far, scientists have isolated the antibodies, identified what part of HIV they target and even know the exact shape they make, Koff said. Researchers are now using this information to design vaccines that prompt the immune system to make them.

"We're not there yet," Nabel said.

NIAID this month said it will spend up to $186 million over the next seven years to fund the Centers for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology & Immunogen Discovery. The new consortium is focused on making vaccines that induce these protective antibodies, with major grants going to Duke and Scripps.

Nabel said no vaccine being tested today "is likely to hit it out of the park," but many researchers do feel advances in broadly neutralizing antibodies are key to developing a highly successful HIV vaccine.

"It's really a new day when we start to think about where we are with AIDS vaccines," Nabel said.

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halfclover   17-7-2012 17:36  Karma  +2   Great info, thanks




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TheButler
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Post at 17-7-2012 03:35  Profile P.M. 
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Reply #2 TheButler's post

Don't know why it's such a big day for HIV drugs, but the FDA just approved a pill (previously just a treatment for HIV) to help prevent infection.  Success rates in the phase III were 73%!

Text:

US regulators on Monday approved Truvada, made by Gilead Sciences in California, for use as the first pill to help prevent HIV in some at-risk groups, the US Food and Drug Administration said.

“Truvada is to be used for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in combination with safer sex practices to prevent sexually-acquired HIV infection in adults at high risk. Truvada is the first drug approved for this indication,” it said.

Truvada has been on the US market since 2004 as a treatment for people infected with HIV to be used in combination with other antiretroviral drugs.


An FDA advisory panel in May urged the approval of Truvada for prevention when taken in uninfected people after clinical trials showed Truvada could lower the risk of HIV in gay men by 44 to 73 percent.

The pill has been hailed by some AIDS advocates as a potent new tool against human immunodeficiency virus, but some health care providers are concerned it could encourage risky sex behavior.

A study on Truvada published in 2010 in the New England Journal of Medicine included 2,499 men who were sexually active with other men but were not infected with the virus that causes AIDS.

Participants were selected at random to take a daily dose of Truvada — a combination of 200 milligrams of emtricitabine and 300 milligrams of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate — or a placebo.

Those in the study who took the drug regularly had almost 73 percent fewer infections. Across the entire study, including those who had not been as diligent in taking Truvada, there were 44 percent fewer infections than in those who took a placebo.

Experts hailed the results as game-changing and the first demonstration that an already-approved oral drug could decrease the likelihood of HIV infections.




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hulk2211
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Post at 17-7-2012 09:10  Profile P.M. 
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I guess this information is all well and good but I fail to understand why the medical research community doesn't focus on a much bigger problem.  I, of course, am referring to the greatest scourge known to man... PMS.  Once a month, men all across the world are getting shit on by their SOs and nobody cares.  What the hell kind of world do we live in?  Screw the other diseases... I would love to be able to come home and not have to worry about someone chucking something at my head for absolutely no reason.

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TheButler   17-7-2012 11:23  Karma  +1   Are you SURE she has no reason to throw stuff at you?? lol.
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Frenchexpat (Faites chier la vache)
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Post at 17-7-2012 09:48  Profile P.M. 
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Interesting but how long until it gets really accessible to us? Am sure by then my lb will be old and wrinkled (well technically he is already!). Poor chap, wont make him feel better to hear he has been used as a sausage under plastic all his life and he could have been free as hell...

What? Multiple Personnality disorder? Nah!!!!! Just that there's me and my Lb! Not multiple, just two, but I can assure you, he has a mind of his own!

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TheButler   17-7-2012 11:25  Karma  +1   Truvada is available now.
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halfclover
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Post at 17-7-2012 17:39  Profile P.M. 
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I've no doubt there will be a cure for AIDS in the next few years but there will always be a new one. Mother Nature is a bitch and always finds a way to kill people, just her little game.
Hey hulk2211, maybe Mother Nature has permanent PMS, that would explain a lot.

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TheButler   18-7-2012 11:18  Karma  +1   1 anecdotal case of cure by bone marrow transplant! Ouch!
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TheButler
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Post at 18-7-2012 11:18  Profile P.M. 
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QUOTE:
Originally posted by halfclover at 17-7-2012 17:39
I've no doubt there will be a cure for AIDS in the next few years but there will always be a new one. Mother Nature is a bitch and always finds a way to kill people, just her little game.
Hey hulk221 ...

Anybody who believes in evolution will agree with you I think.  The bigger the population (6bn) and the more connected (airplanes) we are, the more our communal body creates an environment that microbes just can't ignore.  We're just one big petri dish if you think about it, and evolution can't ignore filling this niche with something infective.  

But!  Until that something comes along I'm creampie-ing her in the azz!




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kennyhlee
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Post at 18-7-2012 11:21  Profile P.M. 
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I have read this article before.  The treatment would be expensive for innovation like this.
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Post at 19-7-2012 04:40  Profile P.M. 
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A good news is a good news indeed. But the key problem to this is to how the scientists and the pharmaceutical firms develop drugs and vaccines that are within the reach of people who are actually engaged in the industry (you know, the prostitute). Most of these girls do not attain good education and come from low economic background. If you want to wipe the virus away, wipe it from the roots.
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TheButler
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Post at 19-7-2012 05:27  Profile P.M. 
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QUOTE:
Originally posted by WayneMcLaren at 19-7-2012 04:40
A good news is a good news indeed. But the key problem to this is to how the scientists and the pharmaceutical firms develop drugs and vaccines that are within the reach of people who are actually eng ...

I'm not sure that the "root" of HIV is in the prostitute population.  Certainly the origin itself was in monkeys in Africa, and this highlights part of the problem of disease of any kind: there are lots of animal reservoirs and, just like the annual flu, the disease can eventually jump from it's animal host to humans.

If you look at the history of smallpox eradication, it required mass, global immunization for the rich and poor.  Most of this was government funded and hopefully we'll see a similar effort with the eventual HIV vaccine.  Of course in the U.S. the right wing religious nuts will probably oppose routine vaccination just like they oppose sex education and condom distribution to teenagers.




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bonkers89
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Post at 20-7-2012 03:00  Profile P.M. 
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Thats all good news for HIV - which is the worst because you can die from it.

But what about all the other uncurable ones that make your life miserable hell: Herpes, warts, etc, etc ?

Still not worth it to have some ugly sores pop up around your lips once every 6 months, is it?  (i believe thats a symptom of herpes)

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TheButler   20-7-2012 05:04  Karma  +1   Yep! still plenty of STD problems out there.
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cactuss
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Post at 27-7-2012 06:49  Profile P.M. 
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you could get genital warts, that stuff is nasty.
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