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GSK Biologicals and IAVI partner to develop AIDS Vaccine
EHM News Bureau - Mumbai
GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals (GSK Biologicals) and the International AIDS Vaccine
Initiative (IAVI) have announced a public-private partnership to develop an
AIDS vaccine using a promising new technology. The collaboration will facilitate
early research and development of GSKs non-human primate adenovirus vaccine
vector as an enabling component of an effective AIDS vaccine.
IAVI will contribute technical expertise and funding, and GSK and IAVI researchers
will form a joint R&D team. Under the agreement, IAVI and GSK will collaborate
to advance the development of the technology, which uses non-infectious vaccine
vectors to stimulate specific immune responses directed against HIV. The vectors
are derived from adenoviruses, originally isolated from non-human primates,
which have been engineered to be non-infectious and capable of efficiently delivering
genes expressing HIV proteins to the immune system.
The IAVI-GSK collaborative research will initially focus on vaccines designed
to elicit immune responses against variants of HIV that circulate predominantly
in Africa, although the goal of the collaboration is to develop vaccines that
would be applicable worldwide. After pre-clinical evaluation, GSK Biologicals
and IAVI plan to conduct Phase I clinical trials of the vaccine candidates.
The partners hope this will be the first phase of a collaboration that could
be much broader. Both GSK Biologicals and IAVI are committed to making any successful
vaccine available as quickly as possible to developing countries at affordable
prices. This is a new kind of partnership that involves real scientific
collaboration to accelerate the development of an AIDS vaccine. Together, GSK
Biologicals and IAVI will work to develop an important approach to an effective
AIDS vaccine. We hope this will be the beginning of a long term partnership
that brings together some of the most promising technologies in the field. We
cannot think of a better partner, given GSKs long-standing commitment
to addressing diseases of developing countries, said Seth Berkley, MD,
President and CEO of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative.
This partnership is a model for how the public and private sectors can
work together. The private sector has an immense amount of knowledge, resources
and expertise, and innovative partnerships such as this are essential to tackle
the biggest global health challenges said Jean Stéphenne, President
and General Manager of GSK Biologicals, the Rixensart, Belgium-based unit of
GlaxoSmithKline PLC and one of the worlds largest vaccine companies.GSK
is pursuing three scientific avenues to research an effective AIDS vaccine.
This partnership will help us to accelerate the evaluation of these technologies,
and can be extended in the future, Stéphenne added.
The announcement comes in the lead up to the G8 summit in Scotland in July,
where world leaders are expected to build on previous commitments to expand
support for research of vaccines against AIDS, as well as other developing-country
diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria. Innovative financing tools proposed
by the UK government include both an International Finance Facility for Immunisation
and advance-purchase commitments to spur private investment in vaccines against
diseases of the developing world.
An AIDS vaccine is essential in the fight against disease and extreme
poverty in the developing world, particularly in Africa, said Hilary Benn,
UK Secretary of State for International Development. This agreement demonstrates
the kind of collaboration between the public and private sectors that is critical
for enhancing the research and development of new vaccines against the worlds
most devastating infectious diseases. We are proud to have been the first government
to provide financial support to IAVI, and we welcome this joint venture.
The non-human primate adenovirus vector technology was derived from research
conducted by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania. The technology is
owned by the University and is exclusively licensed to GSK.
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