Analyses of results of a trial of
a failedHIVvaccine have prompted some
prominent scientists to urge the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) to retreat
from testing candidate vaccines of
questionable value and to return to the
laboratory to develop new approaches.
Whether or not the agency will move
to scale back vaccine trials, scientists
agree that with no prospect of an effective
vaccine to curb the HIV/AIDS pandemic
in the foreseeable future, expanding
the repertoire of prevention tools is
all the more important. New findings
from studies of varying prevention strategies,
including male circumcision and
the use of antiretroviral drugs to curb
HIV transmission during breastfeeding
by mothers in resource-poor settings,
were presented here at the 15th Conference
on Retroviruses and Opportunistic
Infections.