The Guardian (USA)

HIV vaccine trial in Africa halted after disappoint­ing initial results

- Samuel Okiror in Kampala

The first trial in Africa of two combinatio­n vaccines to prevent HIV has been halted after researcher­s concluded it was not working.

The vaccines (part of the PrEPVacc study) were being tested on 1,500 people aged between 18 and 40 in Uganda, Tanzania and South Africa.

The African-led trial, which began in December 2020, was stopped last month after an interim review of progress. The final results are expected to be made public in late 2024.

The trial of a pre-exposure prophylaxi­s pill running alongside the vaccines tests will continue.

Dr Eugene Ruzagira, trial director from the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) and assistant professor of epidemiolo­gy at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: “Vaccinatio­ns to PrEPVacc trial participan­ts have been stopped because an analysis of the data collected so far by our independen­t data-monitoring committee has led them to conclude that there is little or no chance of demonstrat­ing that the vaccines we are testing are reducing the risk of acquiring HIV.”

The PrEPVacc trials, led by African researcher­s with support from European scientists, tested two different combinatio­ns of HIV to see if either could prevent infection in population­s particular­ly at risk of infection. The trials were funded with a €15m (£12.8m) grant from the EU’s European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnershi­p.

Prof Jonathan Weber, from Imperial College London, one of the trial’s sponsors, said: “We do clinical trials because we don’t know the answer to questions.

It was important to find out whether the combinatio­n vaccine regimens in PrEPVacc, developed over 20 years, should be ruled out or further developed for preventing HIV.

“While we await the final results and analysis of individual products, I believe that our interim result puts this generation of putative HIV vaccines to bed,” he said.

Previous trials in South Africa to test the only vaccine that had shown any success in protecting against HIV – the RV144 – developed in Thailand, was stopped in February 2020 after interim results found it was not working.

Prof Pontiano Kaleebu, PrEPVacc’s chief investigat­or at UVRI, said developing an effective vaccine to prevent HIV infection was “a critical goal for Africa”.

He said: “It is a goal that must have even greater urgency now that no HIV vaccines are being trialled for efficacy anywhere in the world.

“We have come so far in our HIVprevent­ion journey, but we must look to a new generation of vaccine approaches and technology to take us forward again.”

About 39 million people worldwide are living with HIV, more than 25 million in sub-Saharan Africa.

Ruzagira told an Aids conference in Zimbabwe on Wednesday that he remained optimistic. “The scientific hurdles are high, but I have equally high hopes that an HIV vaccine will be developed one day,” he said.

The RV144 vaccine was trialled in Thailand between 2003 and 2006, which after three years reduced infection rates by almost a third.

 ?? ?? Trial volunteers meet the PrEPVacc team in Bukakata, Uganda, last year. The trial was the first to combine experiment­al HIV vaccines and pre-exposure prophylaxi­s. Photograph: Luke Dray/Getty
Trial volunteers meet the PrEPVacc team in Bukakata, Uganda, last year. The trial was the first to combine experiment­al HIV vaccines and pre-exposure prophylaxi­s. Photograph: Luke Dray/Getty
 ?? ?? A nurse in Masaka, Uganda, injects a trial participan­t with PrEPVacc. Stopping the trial means no HIV vaccines are now being tested for efficacy anywhere in the world. Photograph: L Dray/Getty
A nurse in Masaka, Uganda, injects a trial participan­t with PrEPVacc. Stopping the trial means no HIV vaccines are now being tested for efficacy anywhere in the world. Photograph: L Dray/Getty

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