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Executive summary and recommendations from the WHO/UNAIDS/IAVI expert group consultation on ‘Phase IIB-TOC trials as a novel strategy for evaluation of preventive HIV vaccines’, 31 January–2 February 2006, IAVI, New York, USA

Authors :
Margaret I. Johnston
Dean Follmann
Mitchell Warren
Eric Sandström
Frances Priddy
Saladin Osmanov
Deborah L. Birx
Jim Ackland
Bonnie J. Mathieson
Susan Allen
Barry Peters
Ronald H. Gray
Siobhan Malone
Judith N. Wasserheit
David A. Cooper
Abhay Indrayan
Helen Rees
Patricia E. Fast
Ibou Thior
Shuigao Jin
Georges Thiry
Pontiano Kaleebu
Pete Smith
Timothy D. Mastro
Punnee Pitisuttithum
John G. McNeil
Wasima Rida
Steven G. Self
Elwyn Chomba
Raymond Hutubessy
Jonathan Levin
R. Ramakrishnan
Etienne Karita
Alan Fix
Gavin J. Churchyard
Daniel Barth-Jones
C. Schmidt
Mary A. Foulkes
Yuhua Ruan
Ruth Macklin
Michael N. Robertson
Ann Duerr
Godfrey B. Tangwa
Source :
AIDS. 21:539-546
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2007.

Abstract

This report summarizes the discussions and recommendations from a consultation held in New York City, USA (31 January-2 February 2006) organized by the joint World Health Organization-United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS HIV Vaccine Initiative and the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative. The consultation discussed issues related to the design and implementation of phase IIB 'test of concept' trials (phase IIB-TOC), also referred to as 'proof of concept' trials, in evaluating candidate HIV vaccines and their implications for future approval and licensure. The results of a single phase IIB-TOC trial would not be expected to provide sufficient evidence of safety or efficacy required for licensure. In many instances, phase IIB-TOC trials may be undertaken relatively early in development, before manufacturing processes and capacity are developed sufficiently to distribute the vaccine on a large scale. However, experts at this meeting considered the pressure that could arise, particularly in regions hardest hit by AIDS, if a phase IIB-TOC trial showed high levels of efficacy. The group largely agreed that full-scale phase III trials would still be necessary to demonstrate that the vaccine candidate was safe and effective, but emphasized that governments and organizations conducting trials should consider these issues in advance. The recommendations from this meeting should be helpful for all organizations involved in HIV vaccine trials, in particular for the national regulatory authorities in assessing the utility of phase IIB-TOC trials in the overall HIV vaccine research and development process. (c) 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Details

ISSN :
02699370
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f945012dd9080175ccabc4442dd5ced