Goal
#3 |
To
conduct and support preclinical and clinical research to develop, test,
and optimize treatments for HIV infection, HIV-associated conditions, and
for the prevention of HIV transmission. |
Objective
#1 |
Improve
understanding of the structure and function of molecular targets in order
to develop improved assays for such targets; conduct screening, discovery,
and preclinical development of novel anti-HIV agents and strategies (such
as gene transfer technology and interruption of transmission) directed
to the virus and/or host cell; and foster activity by and in collaboration
with industry.
|
Description
|
Identify
and develop novel anti-HIV therapies, particularly those therapies that
impact at different stages of the life cycle of the virus.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Identify
and characterize promising targets for anti-HIV therapy and extend knowledge
of their mechanisms of action, develop relevant assays for identifying
drugs active against those targets, and develop new compounds active
at those targets, with emphasis placed on identifying agents active
at novel targets other than reverse transcriptase inhibitors; emphasize
agents that can effectively cross the blood-brain barrier.
- Complete
preclinical development, in cooperation with industry when appropriate,
of promising new compounds and combinations of compounds and novel natural
products, including assessment of toxicity, immunologic effects, pharmacokinetics,
teratogenicity, and fertility in animal models and development of analytical
method and chemical formulations.
- Continue
and accelerate domestic and international collection screening of large
numbers of natural and synthesized compounds for anti-HIV activity,
with a particular emphasis on the detection of agents that act at unique
steps of the HIV life cycle with the intent of identifying lead compounds
that can be modified for increased potency and other attributes (such
as bioavailability and central nervous system penetration); develop
and screen combinatorial libraries.
- Emphasize
basic and applied research to advance cross-NIH development of gene
therapy; support development of preclinical laboratories to advance
gene therapies; advance gene therapies, including new strategies for
streamlining or eliminating ex vivo manipulation of cells; develop more
efficient and safe viral and non-viral gene delivery vectors; target
tissue cells and subcellular compartments; develop effective antiviral
genes; standardize evaluation of different gene therapies singly and
in combination; and develop suitable lentivirus animal models for in
vivo efficacy and safety studies.
- Determine
the high-resolution molecular structures for several of the HIV proteins
and apply these structures to the rational design of drugs as part of
the targeted drug development program; determine generalizable and effective
approached for the use of macromolecular structure in designing drugs
to combat HIV infection and AIDS; make resolved structures available
in publicly accessible data bases.
- Increase
understanding of the mechanisms and limitations of drug resistance;
study the effect of various agents on HIV replication and viral variation;
evaluate early markers of resistance; evaluate the activity of anti-HIV
drugs in various cell types (including macrophages) and in various stages
of the cell cycle.
- Develop
new compounds capable of inhibiting the sexual transmission of HIV,
such as topical microbicides (which may inhibit HIV and STDs associated
with enhanced HIV transmission), HIV-specific viricides, and systemic
agents.
- Develop
formulations that would be suitable for infants and children for both
existing and experimental agents.
- Evaluate
transplacental passage of antiretroviral and other agents as well as
the effects of these drugs on placental function and on the embryo/fetus
in animal models.
|
Objective
#2 |
Conduct
clinical trials and develop new trial methodologies for the treatment
of HIV infection. Trials should be designed in order to rapidly develop
new therapeutic strategies, optimize clinical efficacy and proper use
of available modalities, define factors that affect the success of therapeutic
strategies (including the role of resistance), and advance our understanding
of disease pathogenesis and progression.
|
Description
|
Trials
to evaluate new antiretroviral therapies alone and in combination will
provide important information regarding resistance and synergistic effects
of drugs that may eventually prolong the disease-free state and survival
in HIV-infected individuals.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Support
and improve clinical trials of potential therapeutic agents and combinations
of agents in studies to determine pharmacokinetics and bioavailability
and evaluate anti-HIV combinations that are non-cross-resistant, synergistic,
and toxicity-sparing and that may delay development of drug-resistant
HIV strains; enhance collaboration between and within ICDs to facilitate
opportunities for clinical trials.
- Implement
the development and evaluation of virologic, immunologic, and clinical
markers to assess drug activity and determine the prognostic value of
surrogate markers in response to therapeutic interventions.
- Support
research and development of clinical trials methodology and study design
so that appropriate pathways are taken rapidly to evaluate the activity,
clinical efficacy, and ultimate acceptability of new agents and approaches
that translate into clinical use.
- Increase
the understanding of the pathogenesis of HIV disease based on the evaluation
of antiretroviral agents in clinical trials; establish effective mechanisms
to evaluate therapeutic interventions and elucidate the pathogenesis
of acute/early HIV infection.
- Foster
collaboration and better interactions with industry in drug development
and evaluation efforts.
- Evaluate
safety, toxicity, and pharmacokinetics of retroviral agents provided
to pregnant women, including transplacental passage of the agent, safety
to the fetus/infant, and pharmacokinetics of drug elimination in the
newborn. (Also noteworthy, assess the potential efficacy and feasibility
of obstetric interventions to prevent vertical transmissions, such as
cesarean deliveries and other aspects of intrapartum care.)
- Enhance
utilization of General Clinical Research Centers (GCRCs) for the conduct
of single and multi-institutional clinical trials.
- Develop
and validate quality-of-life parameters included in patient assessments
of clinical trials.
- Support
research on the effectiveness of pharmacologic (including compliance
with therapies and STD prevention) and non-pharmacologic including psychosocial)
interventions (including nutritional factors and adherence improvement).
- Investigate
possible interactions between therapies for HIV-related disease and
other substances that HIV-infected individuals might use, such as drug-abuse
treatment medications, oral contraceptives or other prescription drugs,
nonprescription drugs, alternative or complementary therapies, or drugs
of abuse.
- Coordinate
studies to encourage co-enrollment of patients on all trials where appropriate
(co-enrollment would not only allow for better utilization of limited
resources but also enable assessment of concomitant medications and
their interactions, improving the efficiency of the primary study).
- Develop
a coordinated plan to evaluate long-term therapeutic strategies, e.g.,
develop plans for long-term follow-up, enroll patients in sequential
randomized trials once they have reached an end point in their initial
trial.
- Support
clinical trials to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of existing
and experimental agents for use in treating HIV-infected infants and
children; evaluate the effects of puberty on the pharmacokinetics of
antiretroviral agents and other drugs for the treatment/prophylaxis
of HIV infection and the pharmacokinetics of drugs in adolescents.
- Evaluate
potential late toxic effects of antiretroviral therapy given to infants
and children.
|
Objective
#3 |
Develop
and evaluate strategies that will enhance, restore, and/or maintain the
immune systems of HIV-infected individuals and extend our understanding
of immunopathogenesis.
|
Description
|
Essential
to HIV research efforts are studies directed toward finding therapies
that can restore, enhance, or maintain the integrity of the immune system.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Evaluate
therapeutic approaches that test specific hypotheses of HIV immunopathogenesis.
- Develop
and validate new methods for evaluating immune function in the context
of clinical trials.
- Continue
and accelerate the testing of cytokines, modulators of cytokines, and
other immunomodulating agents either singly or in combination with antiretroviral
agents for the purpose of reconstituting the deficient immune systems
of HIV-infected individuals.
- Develop
and evaluate various approaches of active and passive immunotherapy
for both HIV infection and its sequelae.
- Develop
a program of reconstituting the immune systems of HIV-infected individuals
by administration of cellular elements in an autologous, syngeneic,
or allogeneic fashion, including use of expanded peripheral blood T
cells, bone marrow transplantation, thymic transplantation, cord blood,
stem cells, and/or xenogeneic transplantation.
- Develop
new therapeutic strategies based on gene therapy approaches to protect
hematopoietic stem cells and thereby reconstitute the immune system
with HIV-resistant lymphoid, monocytic and other cellular compartments.
- Use
structural biologic techniques to determine the structures of various
cytokines and cytokine receptors as potential targets for HIV therapies.
- Increase
collaboration of ICDs by joint funding of projects to facilitate the
conduct of immune-based therapeutic trials and to enhance pathogenesis-related
research in HIV-infected individuals.
- Foster
collaboration and better interactions with industry in developing and
evaluating immunorestorative/immune-enhancing agents.
- Define
the mechanisms of immunomodulating agents and proceed with preclinical
studies of the most promising agents.
|
Objective
#4 |
Discover,
develop, and evaluate potential agents for prevention and treatment of
HIV-associated OIS and other infections modified by HIV infection.
|
Description
|
Opportunistic
infections (OIs) are the most common cause of morbidity and mortality
in HIV-infected individuals. Continuing to develop and evaluate therapies
for preventing and treating OIs is essential for decreasing morbidity
and improving survival.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Support
basic research on OIs in order to increase fundamental knowledge and
to identify new therapeutic targets and strategies and understand how
pathogens contribute to morbidity.
- Determine
the high resolution molecular structures for OI proteins and apply these
structures to the rational design of drugs as part of the targeted drug
development program and determine generalizable and effective approaches
for the use of macromolecular structure in designing drugs to combat
OIs associated with AIDS.
- Support
discovery and preclinical programs to develop therapies especially targeting
cryptosporidia, microsporidia, JC virus, HPV, and azole-resistant fungal
organisms, with emphasis on bioavailable agents with favorable pharmacokinetics.
- Develop
in vitro culture systems for OIs such as Pneumocystis carinii (PCP).
- Further
conduct clinical trials for the prophylaxis and treatment of HIV-associated
OIs in HIV-infected individuals.
- Important
OIs include Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection (TB), Mycobacterium
avium complex, cytomegalovirus infection, cryptosporidiosis, microsporidiosis,
cryptococcal disease, azole-resistant fungal infection, toxoplasmosis,
PCP, acyclovir-resistant herpes infections, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
(PML), bacterial infections, and other infections whose course is affected
by HIV.
- Evaluate
immune-based therapies as adjuncts for treating OIs.
- Determine
the optimal strategies and combinations of agents to prevent and treat
multiple OIs (by simultaneous prophylaxis of multiple opportunistic
pathogens) and determine their effects in combination with antiretroviral
agents.
- Strategies
need to focus on the subgroups at increased risk, time of initiation,
compliance, pharmacologic interactions, toxicities and adverse reactions
(e.g. trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole reactions), and minimizing development
of resistance; studies should include quality-of-life assessments and
cost-benefit analyses.
- Develop
and utilize animal models for preclinical efficacy, pharmacokinetics,
and safety testing of potential agents for OIs, including mutagenicity
and teratogenicity.
- Develop
clinically useful assays for the rapid diagnosis of disease, treatment
response, and sensitivity testing of OIs, especially TB, MAI, enterics,
and infections produced by CMV, fungi, Toxoplasma, and JC virus, including
use of specimens in existing repositories.
- Determine
the role and capability of preexisting immunity (both induced and natural)
to control OIs and the ability of HIV-infected individuals to respond
to vaccination throughout the course of infection and disease; assess
possible interaction of vaccination and HIV replication.
- Explore
the bidirectional interactions between OIs and HIV infection including
possible impact of opportunistic pathogens on the clinical expression
and acceleration of HIV disease and vice versa.
- Support
clinical trials to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of existing
and experimental agents for use in preventing and treating OIs in HIV-infected
infants, children, and pregnant women.
|
Objective
#5 |
Develop,
evaluate, and implement strategies for interrupting vertical transmission
of HIV from mother to child and extend out understanding of perinatal
transmission and the pathogenesis of early infection (treatment of children
will be addressed in other objectives).
|
Description
|
Vertical
transmission of HIV from mother to child is the predominant mode of transmission
for pediatric HIV infection. The identification, development, and testing
of interventions should be based on the pathogenesis of transmission.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Support
the rapid translation of basic research observations to strategies for
the interruption of vertical transmission; apply the results of clinical
trials to the investigation of pathogenesis and to clinical practice.
- Support
national and international collaborative studies to retrospectively
and prospectively evaluate potential obstetric factors associated with
vertical transmission including non-protocol use of antiretroviral agents.
- Develop
and evaluate strategies for interrupting the vertical transmission of
HIV from pregnant women to their offspring that are simpler and less
costly than the current AZT regimen and derive information on pathogenesis
of transmission from the study of these strategies.
- Such
strategies include antiviral agents, anti-HIV immunoglobulin, monclonal
antibodies, vitamin supplementation (e.g. vitamin A), HIV vaccines,
adjuvants, virucides, and other intrapartum interventions alone and
in combination.
- Evaluate
the safety, toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and antiretroviral activity
of anti-HIV agents in pregnant women and newborns; explore the use of
highly active agents that may develop resistance rapidly and could be
used in this setting.
- Assess
the potential efficacy and feasibility of obstetric interventions to
prevent vertical transmissions, such as cesarean deliveries and other
aspects of intrapartum care.
- Develop
and improve sensitive and specific diagnostic parameters that are accessible
and cost-effective to permit early differentiation of HIV infection
status in children born to HIV-infected mothers.
- Investigate
the role of the placenta in transmission of anti-HIV drugs from mother
to fetus.
- Expand
the obstetrical and pediatric infrastructure for the conduct of perinatal
trials through collaborative efforts, particularly in the international
setting.
- Support
the long-term follow-up of women and children who participate in perinatal
trials to evaluate potential distant effects of antiretroviral agents
and/or biologics.
- Evaluate
the risk of vertical transmission of drug-resistant virus. Evaluate
incorporation of ACTG 076 AZT regimen into clinical practice in the
United States.
- Evaluate
therapeutic strategies for treating infants during acquisition of HIV
to determine whether disease progression can be significantly altered.
|
Objective
#6 |
Discover,
develop, and evaluate improved strategies for the treatment and prevention
of HIV-associated malignancies and extend our understanding of the risk
factors for and pathogenesis of such malignancies.
|
Description
|
HIV-associated
malignancies have a significant impact on morbidity and mortality, and
some are expected to become increasingly common as survival with sever
immune dysfunction is prolonged and as the demographics of HIV infection
change. The development of methods to identify persons at high risk for
subsequent malignancy, and the identification, development, and clinical
testing of new therapeutic strategies for these malignancies are essential.
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Action
Steps
|
- Support
basic research on HIV-associated malignancies to increase fundamental
knowledge of the etiology, pathogenesis, and biology of these neoplasms;
develop preclinical models for testing potential therapeutic strategies.
- Identify
novel mechanisms and targets (e.g. cytokines, angiogenesis, viral or
hormonal co-factors) for treatment and prevention of HIV-associated
tumors, including Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, HPV-associated
malignancies, and others, and develop new therapeutic strategies on
the basis of these findings.
- Use
structural biologic and biochemical information to rationally design
drugs to inhibit specific pathogenic factors of HIV-associated malignancies.
- Develop
in vivo models (SCID/nude mouse) for pathogenesis and drug sensitivity
testing.
- Develop
in vitro models of KS as well as assays for angiogenesis inhibitors.
- Encourage
the develop and coordinate the conduct of clinical trials that concurrently
evaluate antiretroviral and anti-OI therapeutic strategies directed
against the malignancy in order to assess the effects of such treatment
on the malignancy as well as on the underlying HIV infection, immune
function, and clinical course.
- Continue
and expand screening, discovery and development of novel therapeutic
agents with activity against HIV-associated malignancies (e.g. agents
with better CNS penetration, agents with better safety profiles).
- Develop
trials to optimize existing therapies for malignancies in HIV-infected
patients, including therapeutic adjuncts such as hematopoietic colony-stimulating
factors and supportive care; develop and validate quality-of-life assessments.
- Encourage
collaborative studies to develop mechanisms for early identification
of patients at high risk for malignancy and to develop and assess interventional
strategies to reduce or prevent the development of malignancies.
- Improve
diagnostic methods for early diagnosis of malignancies and for early
detection of recurrent cancer.
- Improve
collaboration between various adult and pediatric cooperative groups
conducting clinical trials of HIV-associated malignancies and ICDs and
industry to accelerate trials completion and approval of active agents.
- Foster
prompt referral of patients (co-registration) from antiretroviral trials
to trials for AIDS-related malignancies.
|
Objective
#7 |
Develop
strategies for assessing, preventing, and treating central and peripheral
nervous system dysfunction in the course of HIV infection.
|
Description
|
Nervous
system impairment, including AIDS-related cognitive/motor dysfunction
(formerly AIDS dementia complex), and peripheral nerve/spinal cord dysfunction
are serious sequelae of HIV disease.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Develop
novel strategies and agents that are active against putative pathways
of HIV-induced CNS dysfunction, e.g inhibitors of quinolinic acid, excitatory
neurotransmitters, gp160/120, and other potential neurotoxins.
- Implement
studies related to the delineation of mechanisms responsible for impaired
neurocognitive development in children born to HIV-infected mothers,
and develop strategies directed at the prevention and treatment of this
complication of HIV infection; utilize insights from the impaired state
to better understand the course of normal neurocognitive development.
- Implement
clinical trials addressing nervous system complications of HIV infection
and incorporate neurologic and neuropsychological assessments into other
HIV-related clinical trials.
- Develop
therapeutic agents and/or delivery systems that are capable of crossing
the blood-brain barrier and develop carriers that capitalize on different
mechanisms to deliver drug to the CNS and are active against HIV infection;
assess the safety of these different preparations; develop an understanding
of physical and physiological mechanisms involved in penetration of
the blood-brain barrier, and possibly develop agents that could conceivably
block HIV entry into the CNS.
- Better
delineate etiologies of peripheral neuropathy in HIV infection, and
develop strategies to prevent and treat this complication.
- Develop
and utilize in vitro and animal models of CNS impairment and AIDS-related
cognitive/motor dysfunction to further identify agents that can reverse
HIV neuropathogenesis.
- Implement
assessments and approaches for the diagnosis of HIV-related dementia
in clinical studies; improve implementation of standardized adult, adolescent,
and pediatric neuropsychologic and neurologic assessment batteries in
clinical studies and evaluate treatment-induced changes in neurocognitive
impairment in a linguistically and culturally sensitive context.
- Develop
alternative methods for detecting and assessing response to treatment
of central and peripheral nervous system dysfunction including brain
structural, spectroscopic, and functional imaging (for dementia); develop
quantitative summary testing and examination of cutaneous nerve fibers
in neuropathy.
|
Objective
#8 |
Develop
and evaluate therapies for the treatment and prevention of serious HIV-associated
complications, especially wasting syndrome and growth failure, as well
as other disorders including hematologic, dermatologic, renal, metabolic,
pulmonary, and oral manifestations.
|
Description
|
Important
clinical sequelae of HIV infection include wasting syndrome, growth failure,
metabolic disorders, dermatologic disorders, ITP, nephropathy, oral diseases,
and other symptoms and serious complications. Drugs and strategies that
can treat these sequelae are needed to ameliorate these conditions.
|
Action
Steps
|
- Develop
and evaluate therapeutic strategies for preventing and ameliorating
the various sequelae of HIV infection (listed above in the Description)
and increasing understanding of their pathogenesis.
- Develop
and validate quality-of-life parameters for adults and children for
the various sequelae of HIV infection (listed above in the Description).
- Develop
and evaluate therapeutic strategies for alleviating the various symptoms
of unclear etiology in HIV-infected persons (listed above in the Description)
and improving the quality of life.
|
Resources
|
FY95
|
FY96
|
FY96
|
$
463 million
|
$
473 million
|
$
470 million
|
Populations
Served
|
All populations.
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Constituency
Involvement
|
Researchers,
clinicians, community and patient representatives, and NIH-affiliated
advisory councils and committees.
|