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Fact Sheet 480
Immune Therapies in Development

September 24, 2009


NOTE: Several fact sheets describe drugs that are being tested against HIV:

These drugs have not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use against HIV.


Immune Stimulators

We can think of most antiviral drugs as "offense," attacking the virus to slow down its multiplication. Another approach to treating HIV infection is "defense," strengthening the immune response of people who are infected. This Fact Sheet describes new immune stimulators being developed.


Cytokines

Some of these treatments use the body's own chemical messengers (cytokines) to increase the immune system's response to HIV. Different cytokines carry different messages to cells of the immune system. Some cytokines tell a cell to start multiplying; others can tell a cell to self-destruct.


Vaccine-Like Treatment

Another approach to stimulating the immune system is similar to vaccination, except that it is used in people who are already infected with HIV. HRG214 by Virionyx is a genetically engineered group of antibodies to HIV. It is called a "passive immuno-therapeutic pharmaceutical." HRG214 is in Phase I/II trials.

A recent study of ALVAC vaccine plus Remune found a delay in viral load rebound when treatment was interrupted.

A recent study showed that a combination of vaccines against HIV and interleukin-2 (IL-2) increased immune responses to HIV and allowed some people to stop antiviral therapy for up to a year.

AGS-004 by Argos takes a sample of a patient?s virus and extracts RNA. The RNA is loaded into dendritic cells that are administered to the patient, stimulating an immune response to the virus. It is in Phase 2a trials. DermaVir is applied as a skin patch. It is in Phase I/II trials. Another new therapeutic vaccine is VIR201. It is in Phase I/IIa trials.


Other Immune Modulators


Drugs No Longer in Development

The following drugs are no longer being developed for use against HIV:




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