¶ … progress of vaccine development, particularly the challenges. There is also a discussion of funding and its impact on HIV research.
Ever since HIV / AIDS made the evolutionary jump from chimpanzees to humans, it has infected approximately one percent of the global population; in 2005 it killed almost three million people alone. HIV's continued spread is due to its ability to evade the human immune system and vaccines (Understanding Evolution, 2007).
Even with recent advances in scientists' understanding of HIV origination, development and immunology, there are still major scientific obstacles. Several prototype HIV vaccine candidates have failed so far to protect against HIV infection or to reduce viral loads, that is, the concentration of HIV virus in the blood after infection during clinical studies of effectiveness. Therefore there must be a renewed, well-coordinated commitment to conducting basic discovery research as well as preclinical studies and clinical trials (Barouch, 2008).
In the nearly 30 years since HIV was identified as the agent that causes AIDS, more than 60 million people worldwide have been infected with HIV. Most of these individuals live in the developing world and nearly half of them have died. The ideal solution would be the development of a safe and effective HIV vaccine to control the worldwide AIDS pandemic, but HIV vaccine development efforts have been largely unsuccessful so far. According to Dan Barouch (2008) of the Harvard Medical School, this lack of success is due to the "extraordinary diversity of HIV-1, the capacity of the virus to evade adaptive immune responses, the inability to induce broadly reactive antibody responses, the early establishment of latent viral reservoirs, and the lack of clear immune correlates of protection…"
The goal of developing an HIV vaccine is to either prevent infection, or to reduce the concentration of HIV virus in the blood after infection, or to lessen clinical disease progression after infection. The ideal vaccine would completely block infection as well as provide sterilizing immunity. However, most clinically licensed vaccines do not do all these things. A more realistic goal would...
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