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Why Do HIV Vaccine Trials Keep Failing?

- DENIS CHOPERA Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project-syndicate.org Chopera is a medical virologist and Program Executive Manager for the Sub-Saharan African Network for TB/HIV Research Excellence (SANTHE), based at the Africa Health Research Inst

DURBAN  YET ANOTHER seemingly promising HIV vaccine has failed in clinical trials. According to Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the United States National Institutes of Health, which was conducting the trial, a vaccine is “essential to end the global pandemic.” But while the latest failure

DURBAN  YET ANOTHER seemingly promising HIV vaccine has failed in clinical trials. According to Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the United States National Institutes of Health, which was conducting the trial, a vaccine is “essential to end the global pandemic.” But while the latest failure is a disappoint­ment, it should come as no surprise.

To understand why, it is useful to go back to the beginning. Just over 12 years ago, two studies involving a vaccine candidate known as MRK-Ad5 were halted. The failure was comprehens­ive: the studies – STEP (which enrolled men and women in the Americas, the Caribbean, and Australia) and Phambili (including men and women in South Africa) – found that MRK-Ad5 failed to protect subjects against HIV infection. Worse, there was evidence that it may have increased the chances of acquiring HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

The next year, however, hopes were again raised, as another clinical trial – known as RV 144 – seemed to show modest positive results in Thailand. Yet the conclusion that the vaccine worked was based on somewhat dubious statistica­l analysis.

In fact, of the 125 (initially HIV-negative) trial participan­ts who became infected with HIV (out of a total of 16,402), 74 had received the placebo and 51 had received the vaccine. That amounts to an efficacy rate of 31.2% – a good starting point, but nowhere near the level required to tackle a public-health challenge of the magnitude of Sub-Saharan Africa’s HIV epidemic.

A closer look at the results indicates that they are even weaker than they seem. As the former Harvard Medical School professor Ronald Desrosiers observed in 2017, the HIVacquisi­tion curve for the placebo group is nonlinear, with a sudden increase in acquisitio­n among the placebo recipients within the first year of the trial.

That “anomalous” increase accounts for “most or all of the difference in acquisitio­n” compared to the vaccine recipients. In other words, the fact that more placebo recipients contracted HIV had nothing to do with them being less protected than those who had received the vaccine.

Moreover, Desrosiers argued, if the vaccine did have a protective effect, the vaccinated individual­s who became infected would have lower viral loads than their unvaccinat­ed counterpar­ts. That was not the case.

Nonetheles­s, some researcher­s considered the results promising enough to proceed with the recent South Africa trial, HVTN 702, which tested a vaccine candidate based on the RV 144 candidate, but adapted to the HIV strain that is most prominent in the country. After 18 months, 129 of the 5,400 participan­ts who received the vaccine had become infected, compared to 123 of those who received the placebo.

This outcome was a major blow to the millions of Africans who hoped that researcher­s were finally approachin­g a long-term solution to the AIDS epidemic. But the results of the Thailand trial were never strong enough to justify such a large – and expensive – clinical trial.

This is not to say that trial results have to be overwhelmi­ngly positive to merit further study. But, as Desrosiers also emphasizes, spending hundreds of millions of dollars to manufactur­e and test products with little reasonable hope of efficacy is wasteful, at best. More comprehens­ive basic and preclinica­l research would enable scientists to identify approaches with a far better chance of success.

In the case of RV 144, a smaller intermedia­ry trial could have enabled researcher­s to determine whether it was worth investing in another large-scale trial – at much lower cost. The leftover money could have been channeled toward other mitigation strategies for HIV/AIDS, including basic research.

Fauci is right: a vaccine is essential to end the HIV epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa and beyond. But it is a long-term solution, and we don’t yet have the knowledge to merit highly expensive, large-scale clinical trials. Small-scale human trials, which can be scaled up once they have been convincing­ly shown to work, are simply more appropriat­e at this point.

In the meantime, vulnerable or infected people need other kinds of support, from education to treatment. As exciting as they may seem, pie-in-the-sky ideas – or even “intelligen­t” guesses – are not sufficient reason to sacrifice the health and wellbeing of people today.

A vaccine is essential to end the HIV epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa and beyond. But it is a long-term solution, and we don’t yet have the knowledge to merit highly expensive, large-scale clinical trials. Small-scale human trials, which can be scaled up once they have been convincing­ly shown to work, are simply more appropriat­e at this point.

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