PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study confirms early elevated HIV infection risk in some Step Study participants

After about 18 months, risk level decreased to that of volunteers who received a placebo

2012-05-08
(Press-News.org) SEATTLE – A long-term follow-up analysis of participants in the Step Study, an international HIV-vaccine trial, has confirmed that certain subgroups of male study participants were at higher risk of becoming infected after receiving the experimental vaccine compared to those who received a placebo. The vaccine used in the study did not contain the HIV virus, but it did contain HIV genes which were delivered to cells using a vector that employed a type of cold virus known as adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5).

Of the 1,836 men examined in this study, 172 became infected with HIV. Within 18 months of enrollment or one year after the last vaccination, men who had neutralizing antibodies to Ad5 or who were uncircumcised, or both, had a two- to four-fold increased risk of acquiring an HIV infection, according to findings published in the May 4 online edition issue of the Journal of Infectious Disease.

However, the study also found that the risk level waned after about 18 months to be equal to that of volunteers who received a placebo.

Why this association occurred, what the biological mechanisms were and why the risk of infection lessened with time are unknown and require more study, according to Ann Duerr, M.D., a member of the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, who led the data analysis.

"There seems to be some kind of biologic phenomena that affects infection risk," she said.

The current study indicated that self-reported risk behaviors, such as unprotected sex, did not differ significantly between the vaccine and placebo arms of the Step trial.

The research also confirmed there was no elevated risk of infection in vaccinated men who were circumcised and who were Ad 5 seronegative (men who had no neutralizing antibodies to the adenovirus vector used in the vaccine). An earlier interim analysis of the Step Study data, done after immunizations in the vaccine trial were halted in 2007, also detected this relationship between Ad5 sero-status and vaccine-associated HIV risk. Today, only men who are circumcised and Ad5 seronegative are eligible to receive experimental HIV vaccines that use the adenovirus serotype 5 as a biological delivery mechanism.

Duerr said scientists need a better understanding of what happened biologically to men who became infected, before those who are uncircumcised or seropositive for Ad 5 are enrolled in future vaccine trials in which the adenovirus serotype 5 vector is used.

Ad 5 is used as a vector because it elicits a strong immune response by CD8 T cells. These cytotoxic T lymphocytes are thought to be responsible for controlling HIV infection.

In the current study, researchers analyzed data from male Step Study participants who enrolled in a trial that provided follow-up for up to four years after they enrolled in the Step study, or until Dec. 31, 2009, whichever came first.

The Step Study enrolled 3,000 male and female volunteers in North and South America, the Caribbean and Australia between 2004 and 2007. Injections in the study were halted in September 2007 after researchers detected a lack of effectiveness by the vaccine to prevent HIV acquisition or reduce HIV viral load in infected participants, and a higher-than-expected number of HIV infections in certain subgroups of vaccinees. ###

In addition to Hutchinson Center researchers, scientists from the San Francisco Department of Public Health, University of Washington, Emory University, Care Resource, Merck Research Laboratories and two Peruvian institutions co-authored the paper. The study was funded by Merck Research Laboratories and the National Institutes of Health.

Note to media: Please contact Dean Forbes to schedule an interview with Duerr or to obtain a copy of the paper "Extended follow‐up confirms early vaccine‐enhanced risk of HIV acquisition and demonstrates waning effect over time among participants in a randomized trial of recombinant adenovirus HIV vaccine (Step study)."

At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, our interdisciplinary teams of world-renowned scientists and humanitarians work together to prevent, diagnose and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Our researchers, including three Nobel laureates, bring a relentless pursuit and passion for health, knowledge and hope to their work and to the world. For more information, please visit fhcrc.org.

CONTACT

Dean Forbes
206-667-2896
dforbes@fhcrc.org



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Verygoodservice.com Welcomes Teachers Building Society

2012-05-08
Verygoodservice.com , the website dedicated to companies offering good products and good customer service, announces the inclusion of Teachers Building Society on its website. The Dorset-based building society historically had a strong affinity with people who work in education, providing them with mortgages and savings products. It now offers its mortgages to Dorset residents too and the full range of savings products is available to the general public. Being a mutual, the building society is managed for the benefit of its members and has strong customer focus. This dedication ...

Biosignatures distinguish between tuberculosis and sarcoidosis

 Biosignatures distinguish between tuberculosis and sarcoidosis
2012-05-08
This press release is available in German. With a range of diseases, doctors need unique features which they can use to unequivocally identify a patient's illness for an appropriate diagnosis. Scientists therefore search for the biomarkers for an illness or a combination of biomarkers, known as biosignatures, which are as easy as possible to measure. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology in Berlin have now created complete gene and microRNA expression profiles together with important inflammatory mediators in the blood of tuberculosis and sarcoidosis ...

Beautyworld Middle East Grows By 21% Reflecting Upbeat Industry Trends

2012-05-08
EUROMONITOR INTERNATIONAL REVEALS ENCOURAGING OUTLOOK Key figures indicate that the Middle East region will remain a high focus area for global beauty majors, as demand continues to grow at a considerable rate. This was revealed by Epoc Messe Frankfurt at a press conference held to announce the upcoming Beautyworld Middle East, which will run from May 29th to 31st at the Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre. Trends revealed by Euromonitor International, Knowledge Partner for Beautyworld Middle East and leading independent global strategic intelligence ...

Ghost Hunt At Fulford Manor, Devon With Simply Ghost Nights & Special Guest Most Haunted's Chris Conway, 12th May 2012

2012-05-08
One of Devon's most historic houses Great Fulford is a Domesday manor. The present house was mainly constructed in the early 16th century and is a semi fortified mansion built round a courtyard. It boasts a superb paneled Great Hall as well as a marvelous 17th century Great Staircase and other interesting 17th and 18th century rooms, Great Fulford has been the home of the Fulford family since the reign of Richard 1 granted to William de Fulford. The manor originally belonged to the Priory of Canonsleigh until the Reformation when it was purchased by Sir John Fulford. ...

MSU plan would control deadly tsetse fly

MSU plan would control deadly tsetse fly
2012-05-08
EAST LANSING, Mich. — For the first time, scientists have created a satellite-guided plan to effectively control the tsetse fly – an African killer that spreads "sleeping sickness" disease among humans and animals and wipes out $4.5 billion in livestock every year. Michigan State University researchers developed the plan using a decade's worth of NASA satellite images of Kenyan landscape and by monitoring tsetse movement. With unprecedented precision, the plan can tell where and when to direct eradication efforts. Current control efforts in Kenya are ineffective and ...

Clusters of cooperating tumor-suppressor genes are found in large regions deleted in common cancers

2012-05-08
Cold Spring Harbor, NY – Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center have amassed strong experimental evidence implying that commonly occurring large chromosomal deletions that are seen in many cancer types contain areas harboring multiple functionally linked genes whose loss, they posit, confers a survival advantage on growing tumors. Looking closely at one large deletion -- a so-called copy-number alteration or CNA on 8p, the short arm of chromosome 8 -- in mouse models of human liver cancer, the team validated the ...

Slotland's New 'Greatest Hits' Slots Game Tops the Charts -- $3500 in Random Bonuses Awarded This Week

Slotlands New Greatest Hits Slots Game Tops the Charts -- $3500 in Random Bonuses Awarded This Week
2012-05-08
Slotland.com's new Greatest Hits slots game is a retro-style tribute to the music industry. It's a beautiful five reel, 19 payline no download slots game with a bonus game where players can top the charts with their gold and platinum records - and multiply their winnings up to five times. The hit record "Disc" symbol is the Scatter and three Discs trigger the unique bonus game where wannabe music moguls release a new album and sell as many records as possible before the album loses its "Hype". When an album tops the charts or goes on tour Hype increases ...

1 supernova type, 2 different sources

1 supernova type, 2 different sources
2012-05-08
The exploding stars known as Type Ia supernovae serve an important role in measuring the universe, and were used to discover the existence of dark energy. They're bright enough to see across large distances, and similar enough to act as a "standard candle" - an object of known luminosity. The 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded for the discovery of the accelerating universe using Type Ia supernovae. However, an embarrassing fact is that astronomers still don't know what star systems make Type Ia supernovae. Two very different models explain the possible origin of ...

Study shows school-based health centers boost vaccination rates

2012-05-08
AURORA, Colo. (May 7, 2012) – New research from the University of Colorado School of Medicine shows that school-based health centers are highly effective in delivering comprehensive care, especially vaccines to adolescents. The study, published today in the journal Pediatrics, highlights the value of a `captive audience' in a school setting where students can be easily reminded to get recommended vaccinations. "School-based health centers can provide comprehensive care to children and adolescents who are hard to reach," said CU School of Medicine professor of pediatrics ...

Record for Swedish Crown Princess Victoria

2012-05-08
Political leaders such as Barack Obama and Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt may be popular among Swedes. However, they are not as popular as Swedish Crown Princess Victoria, according to the results of the latest SOM survey - University of Gothenburg, Sweden - which were presented Tuesday during the seminar Focus on the Leaders. Although Swedes' confidence in the Swedish Royal Court is at a record low, it turns out that Crown Princess Victoria is the most popular of all royalties included in the survey. 'The popularity of the crown princess is actually the strongest ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Renowned cell therapy expert establishes new laboratory at Weill Cornell Medicine

The Spanish Biophysical Society highlights a study by the EHU’s spectroscopy group

Exploring how age influences social preferences

How experiences in the womb affect alcohol drinking in adulthood

Surgical innovation cuts ovarian cancer risk by nearly 80%

Chicago Botanic Garden, The Morton Arboretum pledge to safeguard threatened species for Reverse the Red Day

Aging researchers find new puzzle piece in the game of longevity

More Ontarians are being diagnosed with psychosis than those born in earlier decades

Blood pressure above goal among US adults with hypertension

Opportunistic salpingectomy for prevention of tubo-ovarian carcinoma

Characterization of the international-born health care workforce in rural US communities

Oral semaglutide and heart failure outcomes in persons with type 2 diabetes

Targeting the “good” arm after stroke leads to better motor skills

Pink noise reduces REM sleep and may harm sleep quality

Generative AI applications use among us youth

“I see a rubber duck” – neuroscientists use AI to discover babies categorize objects in the brain at just two months old

Two fundamental coordination patterns in underwater dolphin kick identified

Dynamic tuning of Bloch modes in anisotropic phonon polaritonic crystals

Dr. Ben Thacker named SwRI chief operating officer

Korea University’s College of Medicine held the 2025 Joint Forum with Yale University

Wetlands do not need to be flooded to provide the greatest climate benefit

Bat virome evolution in Indochina Peninsula reveals cross-species origins of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and regional surveillance gaps

How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding in the developing world

CHEST® Critical Care added to Web of Science Emerging Sources Citation Index

Scientists unravel vines’ parasitic nature

57.5% of commercially insured patients had at least one chronic condition in 2024, according to Fair Health report

One-third of young people are violent toward their parents

New SEOULTECH study reveals transparent windows that shield buildings from powerful electromagnetic pulses

Randomized trial finds drug therapy reduces hot flashes during prostate cancer treatment

Reshaping gold leads to new electronic and optical properties

[Press-News.org] Study confirms early elevated HIV infection risk in some Step Study participants
After about 18 months, risk level decreased to that of volunteers who received a placebo