Volume 3 Issue 37 December 2004 |
|||
|
|
||
|
BOMBAY, India (Reuters) --India, home to the world's second largest HIV
population after South
Africa, is set to begin human trials of a new vaccine against the virus in
January, a research institute said
on Tuesday.
The country has over 5.1 million people living with HIV/ AIDS and experts saying the number could quadruple by 2010. Human trials of vaccines against different strains of the virus are already being conducted in the United States, Europe, Africa and South America. The Indian trial will focus on sub-type C of the virus, the most common in the country. "It will be the first test in India of a HIV vaccine on humans," said Ramesh Paranjape, a deputy director of the National AIDS Research Institute (NARI) based in Pune, around 160 km (100 miles) south of Bombay. In August the World Bank warned the disease would become the single largest cause of death in the world's second most populous country unless there was a change in treatment policy and progress on prevention. "A good, safe vaccine will help preventive efforts considerably so we are excited about beginning the trials," Paranjape told Reuters. India's HIV problem has assumed serious proportions despite health programmes to halt its spread. Over the years, HIV/ AIDS has moved beyond traditionally high-risk groups such as homosexuals, commercial sex workers and drug users. The virus is spreading into families, infecting mothers and children, and because of the widespread lack of awareness about the illness, many people do not even know they are infected. Experts say the most alarming trend is the spread of the disease to villages, with rural India accounting for 59 percent of infections compared with 41 percent in cities. The first phase of testing of the vaccine, named Adeno Associated Virus based HIV sub-type C, will be conducted on about 30 adult volunteers, Paranjape said. The NARI scientists will monitor the volunteers over a period of one year to test for side-effects and the immune system's response to the vaccine. "It is a very significant step," said Anjali Nayyar, country director of
the International AIDS Vaccine
Initiative, a private non-profit organisation which is providing technical
support for the trials.
"A vaccine is important for the Indian population as the country needs
low-cost intervention to fight
AIDS." |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
© 2008 SafetyIssues.com All rights reserved |
||