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  • From the time that HIV was first discovered to be the virus that causes AIDS, back in

  • 1983, scientists have been working on developing a vaccine. Here we are, more than 30 years

  • laterso why don’t we have a vaccine yet? Oh, and by the way, what is a vaccine

  • and how does it work to prevent an infectious disease?

  • Unlike anti-viral medicines used to treat infections, vaccines work by training a person’s

  • immune system before exposure to a virus, so that the immune system can fight off the

  • virus and prevent that person from becoming infected.

  • HIV presents some unique challenges to developing a vaccine. First, HIV attacks the very immune

  • cells that are sent by the body to kill it off, and inserts its genes inside these cells.

  • After that happens, the only way to get rid of HIV is to kill off the infected cells.

  • That leads to the second challenge, which is that HIV infected cells can hide out and

  • remaindormantor asleep, making it difficult or impossible for other killer immune

  • cells to find it. Thirdly, every time HIV reproduces, it makes a lot of genetic mistakes.

  • And unlike many living things (including humans) that have certain systems in place to correct

  • these mistakes, HIV is a “sloppyvirus that doesn’t fix itself. So, HIV changes

  • over time, and it has been difficult to find a vaccine that will protect against all of

  • these changes.

  • So, how do we propose to build a vaccine? First, you should know that there is never

  • any live or killed HIV in a vaccine, which is a strategy used by some other vaccines

  • against less dangerous viruses. Also, no one participating in a vaccine study is ever exposed

  • to HIV as part of the study!

  • Now that we have that out of the way, the goal of an ideal HIV vaccine is to activate

  • both antibodies and T cells, so that the immune system is ready to fight off HIV. Antibodies

  • are proteins that attach to HIV before HIV can infect a cell, thereby preventing infection.

  • An example of how this works is the polio vaccine. After you get a polio vaccine, you

  • develop antibodies against polio that are ready to attack if you ever come in contact

  • with the polio virus. We’d like to develop an HIV vaccine that develops antibodies that

  • would attack the many strains of HIV that exist. Another strategy is to train T cells

  • to recognize and fight off HIV so that, when HIV enters, the T cells could kill the virus.

  • All HIV vaccines are made with synthetic, manufactured imitations of parts of HIV, a

  • strategy that can never cause infection, but can train the immune system to fight off HIV.

  • The most successful HIV vaccine strategy so far is a combination of 2 HIV vaccines tested

  • in Thailand that prevented 31% of new infections. This vaccine isn’t licensed, but scientists

  • are using information from this study to make more powerful and long-lasting vaccines that

  • can be used for populations around the world.

  • One thing to know is that the most common way to diagnose actual HIV infection is to

  • test for HIV antibodies. A person who becomes HIV infected generates antibodies against

  • HIV, but because they are only developed weeks after infection, they can’t prevent infection.

  • These antibodies can keep HIV in check for a while, but eventually HIV comes out of hiding

  • and causes AIDS, unless a person is treated with antiretrovirals (HIV medicines). Measuring

  • HIV antibodies is a relatively cheap and easy way to test whether someone has been HIV infected,

  • but the test doesn’t usually turn positive until several weeks or several months after

  • infection, because that’s the length of time it takes to develop antibodies without

  • a vaccine. Some people who get a vaccine will also be antibody positive, because they have

  • vaccine-inducedantibodies, also known as VISP. Other tests can be done to tell the

  • difference betweenvaccine-induced seropositivity (VISP) and actual infection. These other tests

  • are available at all research sites that conduct HIV vaccine trials and HIV vaccine trial volunteers

  • can continue to get HIV testing for free at these sites, even after the study has ended.

  • Over 35 million people worldwide are currently living with HIV/AIDS. Fortunately, were

  • part of the way toward developing a safe and highly effective HIV vaccine. And with a committed

  • and diverse partnership of community members, scientists, educators and policymakers, we

  • could ultimately defeat our century’s biggest epidemic.

From the time that HIV was first discovered to be the virus that causes AIDS, back in

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