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Medical News Brief Shocks May Deliver AIDS Vaccines Better: StudyOctober 23, 2009 Delivering electrical pulses along with an experimental AIDS vaccine elicited a better immune response in volunteers than administering the injection alone, researchers said Thursday at the AIDS Vaccine 2009 conference in Paris. Employing a technique called electroporation, U.S. researchers used a device that looks like a pistol to inject a weakened DNA-based vaccine as well as three brief electric shocks. Among 40 volunteers evenly divided into five groups, three of the groups received varying vaccine doses with electroporation; the fourth group was given a placebo plus electroporation; and the fifth was given a conventional injection but with the highest dose. Those who got a traditional injection showed no immune response; three out of the eight participants given the lowest dose electroporally formed a response; and everyone given the highest dose with electroporation had a response. "This is the first clinical trial of electroporation in healthy volunteers for a preventative vaccine," Vasan said. "It can be applied to many diseases, many vaccines, not just for HIV." Her group next plans to conduct a Phase II trial of a stronger DNA vaccine delivered with electroporation. Reuters 10.22.2009; Tan Ee Lyn This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
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