Vaccinating people living with HIV: a fast track to preventive and therapeutic HIV vaccines
- PMID: 37883985
- DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(23)00481-4
Vaccinating people living with HIV: a fast track to preventive and therapeutic HIV vaccines
Abstract
Globally, the number of new HIV infections remains unacceptably high, and urgent new approaches are needed to advance HIV vaccine science. However, the development of a preventive HIV vaccine has proven to be an intractable scientific challenge. Recent advances in HIV immunogen design have taken the field a step closer to triggering the rare precursors of broadly neutralising antibodies, which are widely assumed to be necessary for a vaccine. Nonetheless, these same studies and previous studies in people living with HIV have also highlighted the major hurdles that must be overcome to boost the cross-reactivity and potency of these responses to sufficient levels. Here, we describe an opportunity for fast-tracking the evaluation of candidate preventive and therapeutic vaccines by immunising people with HIV who are antiretroviral therapy suppressed. We argue that such studies, unlike traditional studies of vaccines in participants not infected with HIV, will be faster and more informative and will allow the vaccine field to bypass multiple hurdles. This approach will accelerate the process of defining the capacity of immunogens to trigger relevant antibodies, currently an extremely slow and expensive pathway, and provide a quick path to creating an HIV vaccine.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests PLM is supported for unrelated HIV research by the South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Innovation and National Research Foundation of South Africa, the South African Medical Research Council, the Centre for the AIDS Program of Research, and the Duke Consortia for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Development. Through the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, PLM is funded by the US Agency for International Development. PLM is also funded by the European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-funded Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery and Comprehensive Cellular Vaccine Immune Monitoring Consortium. AT is currently supported for unrelated HIV research by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Swiss HIV Cohort Study, and the EU's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 681032 and (through the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation) grant agreement number 15.0337 from the Swiss Government. PLM and AT are planning to engage in RENEW trials in the future.
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