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AIDS Update for Fag Ass Pirates: Vaccine Nearing Reality at Emory


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http://www.11alive.com/news/article_news.aspx?storyid=93439

 

AIDS Vaccine Nearing Reality at Emory

3/8/2007

 

The world could have a new vaccine designed to kill the AIDS virus in as

little as three to four years according to an Atlanta-based group working on

the vaccine.

 

It is a scientific advance that could save tens of millions of lives, and it

is being developed on the campus of Emory University.

 

The work has been going on quietly for the last 15 years. But now it appears

headed for the bell lap in the race to prevent the disease.

 

And the Atlanta-based group may be way ahead of the rest of the world.

 

The GeoVax lab at Emory is smaller than many garages. And yet the small

modular building may be where the battle to end the reign of one the world's

biggest killers could be won with a vaccine to prevent AIDS.

 

"We're getting results back that indicate we're getting very strong immune

responses in these individuals these people who received our vaccine," said

Don Hildebrand, the president and CEO of GeoVax Inc., the company

spearheading the research in collaboration with Emory, the Centers for

Disease Control, and the National Institutes of Health.

 

The vaccine uses a decoy virus with some of the genetic material of the aids

virus but not enough for anyone to ever get the disease itself from the

shot, according to Dr. Harriet Robinson, Ph. D., of the Emory Vaccine

Center.

 

"It exposes your immune system to a pathogen like a virus or bacteria so

before you've seen it you set up memory cells," Dr. Robinson said, "and then

these memory cells mobilize should you get the actual infection."

 

The test trials have been so successful that the vaccine is now more than a

year ahead of schedule.

 

"Actually another two trials are starting later this year using different

combinations of our vaccine and different administration programs," said

GeoVax CEO Hildebrand. "And following that presuming everything goes well

we'll be starting a phase two program at the end of the year."

 

The vaccine works using a one-two pharmaceutical punch to prime the body

then kill the virus.

 

"It raises both antibodies that can block the virus and it raises white

blood cells called t cells that can kill the virus infected cells," said Dr.

Robinson. "So it really has two methods of controlling an HIV/AIDS infection

once it enters the body."

 

The vaccine's success with the simian AIDS virus has been nothing short of

remarkable. Not only did the vaccine prevent the infection, it kept it under

control for the monkeys that already had it, putting it in a kind of

remission.

 

Researchers believe the same benefits await human subjects.

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