Regoes Roland R, Longini Ira M, Feinberg Mark B, Staprans Silvija I
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
PLoS Med. 2005 Aug;2(8):e249. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0020249. Epub 2005 Jul 19.
Trials in macaque models play an essential role in the evaluation of biomedical interventions that aim to prevent HIV infection, such as vaccines, microbicides, and systemic chemoprophylaxis. These trials are usually conducted with very high virus challenge doses that result in infection with certainty. However, these high challenge doses do not realistically reflect the low probability of HIV transmission in humans, and thus may rule out preventive interventions that could protect against "real life" exposures. The belief that experiments involving realistically low challenge doses require large numbers of animals has so far prevented the development of alternatives to using high challenge doses.
Using statistical power analysis, we investigate how many animals would be needed to conduct preclinical trials using low virus challenge doses. We show that experimental designs in which animals are repeatedly challenged with low doses do not require unfeasibly large numbers of animals to assess vaccine or microbicide success.
Preclinical trials using repeated low-dose challenges represent a promising alternative approach to identify potential preventive interventions.
猕猴模型试验在评估旨在预防HIV感染的生物医学干预措施(如疫苗、杀微生物剂和全身化学预防)中起着至关重要的作用。这些试验通常采用非常高的病毒攻击剂量,以确保一定会发生感染。然而,这些高攻击剂量并不能真实反映HIV在人类中传播的低概率,因此可能会排除那些能够预防“现实生活”暴露的预防性干预措施。迄今为止,由于人们认为涉及实际低攻击剂量的实验需要大量动物,这阻碍了替代高攻击剂量方法的发展。
通过统计功效分析,我们研究了使用低病毒攻击剂量进行临床前试验需要多少只动物。我们表明,采用低剂量反复攻击动物的实验设计,并不需要大量到不切实际的动物数量来评估疫苗或杀微生物剂的效果。
使用反复低剂量攻击的临床前试验是一种很有前景的替代方法,可用于识别潜在的预防性干预措施。