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    A Phase I Double Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Study of the Safety and Immunogenicity of an Adjuvanted HIV-1 Gag-Pol-Nef Fusion Protein and Adenovirus 35 Gag-RT-Int-Nef Vaccine in Healthy HIV-Uninfected African Adults.

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    Date
    2015
    Author
    Omosa-Manyonyi, G
    Mpendo, J
    Ruzagira, E
    Kilembe, W.
    Chomba, E
    Roman, F
    Bourguignon, P
    Koutsoukos, M
    Collard, A
    Voss, G
    Laufer, D
    Stevens, G
    Hayes, P
    Clark, L
    Cormier, E
    Dally, L
    Barin, B
    Ackland, J
    Syvertsen, K
    Zachariah, D
    Anas, K
    Sayeed, E
    Lombardo, A
    Gilmour, J
    Cox, J
    Fast, P
    Priddy, F
    Type
    Article; en
    Language
    en
    Metadata
    Show full item record

    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: Sequential prime-boost or co-administration of HIV vaccine candidates based on an adjuvanted clade B p24, RT, Nef, p17 fusion protein (F4/AS01) plus a non-replicating adenovirus 35 expressing clade A Gag, RT, Int and Nef (Ad35-GRIN) may lead to a unique immune profile, inducing both strong T-cell and antibody responses. METHODS: In a phase 1, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, 146 healthy adult volunteers were randomized to one of four regimens: heterologous prime-boost with two doses of F4/AS01E or F4/AS01B followed by Ad35-GRIN; Ad35-GRIN followed by two doses of F4/AS01B; or three co-administrations of Ad35-GRIN and F4/AS01B. T cell and antibody responses were measured. RESULTS: The vaccines were generally well-tolerated, and did not cause serious adverse events. The response rate, by IFN-γ ELISPOT, was greater when Ad35-GRIN was the priming vaccine and in the co-administration groups. F4/AS01 induced CD4+ T-cells expressing primarily CD40L and IL2 +/- TNF-α, while Ad35-GRIN induced predominantly CD8+ T-cells expressing IFN-γ +/- IL2 or TNF-α. Viral inhibition was induced after Ad35-GRIN vaccination, regardless of the regimen. Strong F4-specific antibody responses were induced. Immune responses persisted at least a year after the last vaccination. The complementary response profiles, characteristic of each vaccine, were both expressed after co-administration. CONCLUSION: Co-administration of an adjuvanted protein and an adenovirus vector showed an acceptable safety and reactogenicity profile and resulted in strong, multifunctional and complementary HIV-specific immune responses.
    URI
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25961283
    http://hdl.handle.net/11295/85501
    Publisher
    University of Nairobi
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