1. A double-blind randomized phase I clinical trial targeting ALVAC-HIV vaccine to human dendritic cells.
- Author
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Eller MA, Slike BM, Cox JH, Lesho E, Wang Z, Currier JR, Darden JM, Polonis VR, Vahey MT, Peel S, Robb ML, Michael NL, and Marovich MA
- Subjects
- AIDS Vaccines administration & dosage, Adult, Cytokines blood, Cytokines immunology, Dendritic Cells metabolism, Dendritic Cells transplantation, Double-Blind Method, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Gene Expression immunology, Gene Expression Profiling, HIV Antibodies blood, HIV Antibodies immunology, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 immunology, HIV Envelope Protein gp160 immunology, HIV Infections prevention & control, Humans, Immunoglobulin G blood, Immunoglobulin G immunology, Injections, Intradermal, Injections, Intramuscular, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Male, Pilot Projects, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic metabolism, Time Factors, Viral Vaccines immunology, AIDS Vaccines immunology, Dendritic Cells immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology
- Abstract
Background: We conducted a novel pilot study comparing different delivery routes of ALVAC-HIV (vCP205), a canarypox vaccine containing HIV gene inserts: env, gag and pol. We explored the concept that direct ex vivo targeting of human dendritic cells (DC) would enhance the immune response compared to either conventional intramuscular or intradermal injections of the vaccine alone., Methodology/principal Findings: Healthy HIV-1 uninfected volunteers were administered ALVAC-HIV or placebo by intramuscular injection (i.m.), intradermal injection (i.d.) or subcutaneous injection (s.q.) of autologous ex vivo transfected DC at months 0, 1, 3 and 6. All vaccine delivery routes were well tolerated. Binding antibodies were observed to both the ALVAC vector and HIV-1 gp160 proteins. Modest cellular responses were observed in 2/7 individuals in the DC arm and 1/8 in the i.m. arm as determined by IFN-γ ELISPOT. Proliferative responses were most frequent in the DC arm where 4/7 individuals had measurable responses to multiple HIV-1 antigens. Loading DC after maturation resulted in lower gene expression, but overall better responses to both HIV-1 and control antigens, and were associated with better IL-2, TNF-α and IFN-γ production., Conclusions/significance: ALVAC-HIV delivered i.m., i.d. or s.q. with autologous ex vivo transfected DC proved to be safe. The DC arm was most immunogenic. Proliferative immune responses were readily detected with only modest cytotoxic CD8 T cell responses. Loading mature DC with the live viral vaccine induced stronger immune responses than loading immature DC, despite increased transgene expression with the latter approach. Volunteers who received the autologous vaccine loaded mature DC developed a broader and durable immune response compared to those vaccinated by conventional routes., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00013572.
- Published
- 2011
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