| Literature DB >> 18544020 |
Sanjay Mehendale1, Jan van Lunzen, Nathan Clumeck, Jurgen Rockstroh, Eva Vets, Philip R Johnson, Pervin Anklesaria, Burc Barin, Mark Boaz, Sonali Kochhar, Jennifer Lehrman, Claudia Schmidt, Mathieu Peeters, Carolynne Schwarze-Zander, Kabeya Kabamba, Tobias Glaunsinger, Seema Sahay, Madhuri Thakar, Ramesh Paranjape, Jill Gilmour, Jean-Louis Excler, Patricia Fast, Alison E Heald.
Abstract
A novel prophylactic AIDS vaccine candidate, consisting of single-stranded DNA for HIV-1 subtype C gag, protease, and part of reverse transcriptase genes, enclosed within a recombinant adeno-associated virus serotype-2 protein capsid (tgAAC09) induced T cell responses and antibodies in nonhuman primates. In this randomized, dose escalation phase I trial, HIV-uninfected healthy volunteers (50 in Europe, 30 in India) received a single intramuscular injection of tgAAC09 at 3 x 10(9) DNase resistant particles (DRP) (n = 16), 3 x 10(10) DRP (n = 23), 3 x 10(11) DRP (n = 25), or placebo (n = 16). Twenty-one participants in Europe received a second (boost) dose of 3 x 10(11) DRP tgAAC09 or placebo at least 24 weeks after the first injection. The vaccine was safe and well-tolerated after initial and boost vaccination. Local and systemic reactogenicity was experienced by 13-25% of participants and was not dose related. No vaccine-related serious adverse events were reported. Modest HIV-specific T cell responses were detected in 7/64 vaccinees (40-385 SFC/10(6) PBMC), with 16% (4/25) responders in the highest dose group. All responses were to Gag epitopes. tgAAC09 appears to be safe, well-tolerated, and modestly immunogenic. Further evaluation of higher doses of tgAAC09 and boost injections is ongoing in Africa.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18544020 DOI: 10.1089/aid.2007.0292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses ISSN: 0889-2229 Impact factor: 2.205