Not exact matches
And a new analysis of the STEP trial, published last November in Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences USA, provides a warning that the very vectors (adenoviruses, which are also employed in other vaccine development work) used to distribute the inactive HIV strains can
actually make the immune
system more vulnerable to infection by recruiting susceptible T cells to mucous membranes, where they are more likely to be infected during sexual activity.
And a new analysis of the stopped STEP trial, published online Monday in Proceedings in the National
Academy of Sciences, provides a warning that the very vectors (adenoviruses, which are also employed in other vaccine development) used to distribute the inactive HIV strains can
actually prime the immune
system to be infected by recruiting susceptible T cells to mucous membranes, where they are more likely to be infected during sexual activity.
Alex Hill: I mean it was
actually part of a big study looking at 160
academies [independent but state - funded schools], where we were given remote access to their
systems so that we could
actually observe what they did and how they operated, and we worked with them for seven to nine years, and during that time there was 411 different leaders who led those schools.