
July 2004 Cover
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Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester are set to begin human testing of an AIDS vaccine that attempts to target five strains of HIV
simultaneously-- an approach that researchers say has worked on animals. The trial is one of at least 18 new approaches to AIDS vaccines underwritten by the National Institutes of Health, and it is one
of four human trials with $70 million in NIH funding.
With other vaccines, the patient is exposed to a small amount of the disease-causing microbe to strengthen the immune system to attack the disease. Researchers, however,
cannot inject patients with HIV. The University of Massachusetts researchers will instead expose patients to DNA strains from HIV, including two types from the United States, two from Africa
and one from Thailand.
The five-strain vaccine will not cause HIV in patients. Scientists hope the vaccine will trick the immune system into responding as if the virus were present.
Thirty-six participants will be immunized three times in six months with the DNA vaccine, and they will receive two inoculations of vaccine-boosting proteins.
Editor's Note: from the Associated Press
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