Vaccines for the prevention of HIV-1 disease

JR Mascola, GJ Nabel - Current opinion in immunology, 2001 - Elsevier
JR Mascola, GJ Nabel
Current opinion in immunology, 2001Elsevier
Clinical investigation in humans and experimental lentivirus infection in nonhuman primates
have advanced our understanding of immune responses that control HIV-1 disease.
Recently, immunization approaches in macaques have shown that the immune response
can control viremia and improve clinical outcome. When such vaccine strategies are
formulated to be similarly immunogenic in humans, they could form the basis for the
development of candidate AIDS vaccines that would prevent infection, suppress progression …
Clinical investigation in humans and experimental lentivirus infection in nonhuman primates have advanced our understanding of immune responses that control HIV-1 disease. Recently, immunization approaches in macaques have shown that the immune response can control viremia and improve clinical outcome. When such vaccine strategies are formulated to be similarly immunogenic in humans, they could form the basis for the development of candidate AIDS vaccines that would prevent infection, suppress progression to disease or reduce HIV-1 transmission in humans.
Elsevier