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Clinical Trials/NCT00428337
NCT00428337
Completed
Phase 1

A Phase I Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of DNA Vaccine EP-1233 and Recombinant MVA-HIV Polytope Vaccine MVA-mBN32, Separately and in a Combined Prime-boost Regimen, When Given to Healthy, Vaccinia-naive, HIV-1-uninfected Adults

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)3 sites in 1 country36 target enrollmentApril 2007
ConditionsHIV Infections

Overview

Phase
Phase 1
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
HIV Infections
Sponsor
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Enrollment
36
Locations
3
Primary Endpoint
Safety of vaccination, as measured by number of adverse events, local and systemic reactogenicity signs and symptoms, changes in electrocardiogram (ECG), cardiac troponin I levels, and differences in other safety laboratory measures
Status
Completed
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine the safety of and immune response to two experimental vaccines, designed for use in combination, for the prevention of HIV infection in healthy adults.

Detailed Description

The worldwide HIV/AIDS epidemic may only be controlled through the development of a safe and effective vaccine that will prevent HIV infection. DNA-based vaccines alone promote a weak immune response but when used as priming immunogens, followed by a recombinant viral vaccine that is a very attenuated vaccinia (smallpox) vaccine presenting the same immunogens as a booster, immunization with such a combination regimen seems to induce much stronger responses. EP-1233 is a DNA-HIV-recombinant vaccine designed to interact with CD4 (helper-inducer) and CD8 (cytotoxic) T lymphocytes (T cells) to prime CD4 and CD8 cells to respond to HIV components. MVA-mBN32 is a HIV-recombinant viral (MVA) vaccine that through other ways of interacting with CD4 and CD8 cells to immunize (boost) with similar HIV immunogens, may result in a stronger immune response. The purpose of this study is to determine the safety of and immune response to two experimental vaccines for the prevention of HIV infection, individually and in combination, in healthy adults who have not been previously vaccinated against smallpox. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups. All participants will receive injections at Days 0, 28, 84, and 168 of the study. Participants assigned to Group 1 will receive, on Day 0, one injection in each arm of EP-1233 or placebo and the same study product (EP-1233 or the DNA placebo) on Day 28. Thereafter, each Group 1 participant will receive one injection of MVA-mBN32 or placebo on Days 84 and 168. Groups 2 and 3 will not begin enrollment until safety and immunogenicity data from Group 1 have been evaluated. Participants assigned to Group 2 will receive only the DNA vaccine EP-1233 (or placebo) in each arm on all injection days. Participants in Group 3 will not begin enrollment until safety and immunogenicity data from Group 1 have been evaluated. Participants assigned to Group 3 will receive a consistent regimen of MVA-mBN32 (or placebo) on all injection days. Participants will be required to keep a symptom log for 3 days after each injection and attend clinical visits on Day 0, 14, 28, 42, 84, 98, 168, 182, 273, and 364 of the study. At each of the 10 visits, a physical exam, cardiac assessment, and HIV risk reduction and prevention counseling will occur. Blood collection will occur on Days 0, 14, 42, 98, 182, 273, and 364. Urine collection will occur on Days 14, 42, 98, and 182.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
April 2007
End Date
August 2008
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Good general health

Exclusion Criteria

  • Previous receipt of smallpox vaccination
  • HIV-infected
  • Hepatitis B surface antigen positive
  • Participation in prior HIV vaccination trial
  • Immunosuppressive medications within 168 days prior to study entry
  • Receipt of blood products within 120 days of study entry
  • Receipt of live attenuated, medically indicated subunit, or killed (inactivated) vaccines within 30 days of study entry
  • Certain abnormal lab values
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Safety of vaccination, as measured by number of adverse events, local and systemic reactogenicity signs and symptoms, changes in electrocardiogram (ECG), cardiac troponin I levels, and differences in other safety laboratory measures

Time Frame: Throughout study

Secondary Outcomes

  • HIV-specific intracellular cytokine staining (ICS) assay and/or interferon-gamma ELISA responses(At 2 weeks following the third and fourth injection)
  • Vaccinia-specific neutralizing binding assays performed on serum samples from participants receiving the MVA vaccine(At 2 weeks following the final vaccination)
  • Self reports on social impact of participation in study(Throughout study)

Study Sites (3)

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