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A new study looking at data from two separate Phase 1 clinical trials shows that a targeted vaccine strategy can successfully activate early immune responses relevant to HIV, a significant advance in longtime efforts to develop an HIV vaccine. A persistent challenge in advancing HIV vaccines has been finding a way to train the immune system to produce antibodies that target many variants of the tricky, rapidly mutating virus. The study, conducted by an international team of scientists from IAVI and Scripps Research, included nearly 80 participants from North America and Africa, helping ensure a future vaccine has global potential. One of the trials used a stepwise vaccination strategy, administering two doses sequentially to guide the immune system to develop antibodies, while the second trial found that an initial dose could successfully activate the desired immune cells. Both vaccines used an mRNA vaccine platform, enabling faster production and clinical testing.
A recently published study found that a new water-soluble formulation of the only drug available to treat helminths, or parasitic worms, can achieve the same effect as the currently available tablet form at half the usual dose. Praziquantel is currently available as large tablets that are bitter and difficult to swallow, especially for children and pets. The new formulation can be dissolved in water and was shown to be more efficiently absorbed, enabling patients to receive a smaller dose without sacrificing efficacy. Further clinical testing is needed before the new formulation can be brought to market, but if it continues to demonstrate success, the new formulation could be a game-changer in addressing helminths, which affect 400 million people worldwide.
A research team in Kenya is conducting the first-ever enteric challenge study in Africa, a critical step toward developing a vaccine for Shigella, a leading global cause of diarrheal disease. Human challenge studies are clinical trials that involve exposing volunteers to a pathogen, which can speed up the development of vaccines and therapies. An international collaboration of researchers helped lay the ground for the study, sharing extensive experience from previous enteric challenge studies in the United States. The Kenyan study will provide key data about how the immune system responds in people with a history of Shigella infections in an endemic setting.