AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition calls for renewed commitment to vaccine research on anniversary of President Clinton's 10-year challenge
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Call for new
urgency, targets and leadership to accelerate
research on HIV Vaccine Awareness Day
New York, NY -- On May 18, 1997,
US President Bill Clinton called for a
concerted effort to develop an AIDS vaccine
within a decade. This year we mark the 10th
anniversary of that call for action with a
global AIDS epidemic that rages on, and without
a preventive HIV vaccine.
"Over the past decade, we have seen great
progress in AIDS vaccine development, and we
now see signs of great hope for development of
a vaccine," said Mitchell Warren, Executive
Director of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition
(AVAC). "But we have fallen short of the goal
set out by President Clinton. Critical elements
of the accelerated, comprehensive effort that
we need to deliver on the promise of an AIDS
vaccine are missing."
In its special HIV Vaccine Awareness Day report, "The Countdown Continues" (available at http://avac.org/pdf/hvad_the_countdown_continues.pdf), AVAC identifies key issues and obstacles to an accelerated, comprehensive approach to AIDS vaccine development and challenges vaccine researchers, advocates, and funders to:
• Accelerate and
better coordinate research and testing of
vaccines and other potential new HIV prevention
technologies.
• Sustain
clinical trial capacity internationally,
especially in communities where the HIV
epidemic is most severe.
•
Develop bold and well-resourced plans for
vaccine research and community education in all
populations at high risk for HIV infection, not
only those who are "easier" to
reach.
• Prepare for
results of current AIDS vaccine efficacy trials
by examining different efficacy scenarios.
• Ensure that research
results of all current trials are widely shared
in order to help develop better next generation
AIDS vaccine candidates.
•
Urgently expand access to proven HIV
prevention options and treatment for all who
need them.
• Bring new,
young investigators into AIDS vaccine
research.
Ten years ago, President Clinton said,
"[W]ith the strides of recent years, it is no
longer a question of whether we can develop an
AIDS vaccine, it is simply a question of
when." While the dream of having that
vaccine in the first decade of the 21st century
has not come true, the world has, nonetheless,
made tremendous advances in the past decade.
Global resources for AIDS vaccine
development, while still short of what is
needed, have quadrupled; the number of
countries with clinical trials capacity has
expanded from North and South America and
Europe to include Asia and Africa; and more
than 25,000 brave men, women, and children have
stepped forward to volunteer for AIDS vaccine
trials around the world.
On this anniversary, AVAC reaffirms its commitment to advocacy for a new clinical trials paradigm that recognizes the need for partnerships that include those from scientific and non-scientific domains. These partnerships both improve research and ensure that communities can immediately benefit from the conduct of clinical trials whose ultimate goal , an AIDS vaccine , may still be years away.
"If we are to sustain the necessary
momentum to develop and distribute an AIDS
vaccine, advocates, activists, scientists,
trial volunteers and concerned citizens must
work together to create a new paradigm for AIDS
vaccine research and development. We must get
better at answering the ‘question of when,' and
be able to explain why it is taking so long to
develop a vaccine. And we must also take every
step necessary to ensure that delays are
avoided, whether in product development,
regulatory decisions, or manufacturing," said
Warren.
"If one candidate fails, we must
ensure that communities everywhere know this is
not the end of the road. We must be sure that
there is another candidate moving steadily
forward into clinical trials," he added. "We
will ultimately measure the search for an AIDS
vaccine in decades, but both President
Clinton's sense of urgency and optimism must
remain with us as we continue the countdown to
a day when the AIDS epidemic is over."
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About AVAC:
Founded in 1995, the
AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC) is a
non-profit, community- and consumer-based
organization that uses public education, policy
analysis, advocacy and community mobilization
to accelerate the ethical development and
global delivery of AIDS vaccines and other HIV
prevention options. For more information, visit
www.avac.org.
About HIV Vaccine Awareness Day:
Each
year on May 18th, people around the world
commemorate HIV Vaccine Awareness Day, an
observance to recognize and thank the thousands
of volunteers, community members, health
professionals, researchers and scientists who
are working together to find a safe and
effective HIV vaccine. It is also a day to
educate our communities about the importance of
HIV vaccine research and development. More
information at http://avac.org/hvad.htm.




