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HIV scientists launch 23 million euro project to develop vaccine

Financed by the European Commission, the European AIDS Vaccine Initiative (EAVI2020) brings together leading HIV researchers from public organisations and biotech companies from across the world in a focused effort to develop protective and therapeutic HIV vaccines.The EAVI2020 consortium unites scientists from 22 institutions, pooling their knowledge and expertise to develop novel candidate vaccines that can be taken through to human trials within five years.

date:  29/10/2015

ProjectEuropean AIDS Vaccine Initiative 2020

acronymEAVI2020

See alsoCORDIS

HIV-1 is responsible for a global pandemic of 35 million people, and continues to spread at a rate of >2 million new infections/year. It is widely acknowledged that a protective vaccine would be the most effective means to reduce HIV-1 spread and ultimately eliminate the pandemic, while a therapeutic vaccine may help mitigate the clinical course of disease and lead to strategies of viral eradication.

However despite 30 years of research, we do not have a vaccine capable of protecting from HIV-1 infection or impacting on disease progression. This in part represents the challenge of identifying immunogens and vaccine modalities with reduced risk of failure in late stage development. To overcome this bottleneck some of the most competitive research groups in vaccine discovery from European public institutions and biotechs from 9 EU countries together with top Australian and Canadian groups and US collaborators, have agreed to join forces in EAVI, providing a pool of international expertise at the highest level.

EAVI2020 will provide a platform for the discovery and selection of several new, diverse and novel preventive and/or therapeutic vaccine candidates for HIV/AIDS. Emphasis will be placed on early rapid, iterative, human vaccine studies to select and refine the best vaccine candidates for advanced development, and will determine the impact of host factors such as gender and genetics on vaccine induced immunity.

Pre-clinical models will be used to complement human studies, and to select novel immunization technologies to be advanced to the clinic. To shift the “risk curve” in product development we will develop innovative risk prediction methods, specifically designed to reduce the risk associated with late stage preventive or therapeutic vaccine failure, increasing the chance of discovery of an effective vaccine.

More info at: www.eavi2020.eu

Twitter www.twitter.com/eavi2020

Facebook: www.facebook.com/eavi2020

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/eavi2020

ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Eavi_2020

Downloads

EAVI2020 Press Release
English
(266 KB - PDF)
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EAVI 2020 Factsheet
English
(473 KB - PDF)
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