J&J's HIV vaccine fails trial in latest blow to the field

File photo: Demonstrators march to the Durban International Conference Centre hosting the International AIDS Conference. Picture: EPA

File photo: Demonstrators march to the Durban International Conference Centre hosting the International AIDS Conference. Picture: EPA

Published Sep 1, 2021

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By Manas Mishra

London - Johnson & Johnson's experimental vaccine failed to provide sufficient protection against HIV to young women in sub-Saharan Africa, in the latest setback to the field after a string of earlier failures.

The mid-stage study called Imbokodo, testing the experimental J&J vaccine, included 2 600 women participants across five Southern African countries, where women and girls accounted for over 60% of all new HIV infections last year.

J&J said it was continuing to study the safety and efficacy of a different experimental HIV vaccine among men who have sex with men, and transgender persons. That trial, conducted in the Americas and Europe, is expected to be completed in March 2024.

Despite the discovery of effective treatments that can put the virus in remission, experts say an HIV vaccine is critical to eradicating the virus that causes AIDS, which resulted in 680 000 deaths last year.

The Imbokodo study showed a 25.2% vaccine efficacy, based on which, the drugmaker said the study will not continue.

"Although this is certainly not the study outcome for which we had hoped, we must apply the knowledge learned from the Imbokodo trial," said Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

The Imbokodo trial of the vaccine, which uses the same adenovirus platform used in J&J's Covid-19 shot, was supported by the NIAID and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

"This is in no way the end of the search for an HIV vaccine," Mitchell Warren, executive director of AVAC, an HIV prevention advocacy group, said in a statement, with the group calling for a comprehensive global strategy to develop HIV vaccines.

Another study in Africa is testing two different HIV vaccine combinations, while Moderna's mRNA HIV vaccine is due to be tested in humans this year.

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