| Literature DB >> 21931737 |
Beryl A Koblin1, Martin Casapia, Cecilia Morgan, Li Qin, Zhixue Maggie Wang, Olivier D Defawe, Lindsey Baden, Paul Goepfert, Georgia D Tomaras, David C Montefiori, M Juliana McElrath, Lilian Saavedra, Chuen-Yen Lau, Barney S Graham.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the development of HIV vaccines, improving immunogenicity while maintaining safety is critical. Route of administration can be an important factor. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21931737 PMCID: PMC3171485 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics and vaccination by study arm.
| Study group | ||||||||
| Total (n = 90) | DNA+ rAd5 IM (n = 30) | DNA+ rAd5 ID (n = 30) | DNA+ rAd5 SC (n = 30) | |||||
| Characteristic | N | (%) | N | (%) | N | (%) | N | (%) |
| Gender | ||||||||
| Male | 53 | (59) | 17 | (57) | 16 | (53) | 20 | (67) |
| Female | 37 | (41) | 13 | (43) | 14 | (47) | 10 | (33) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||||||||
| White-non Hispanic | 36 | (40) | 9 | (30) | 11 | (37) | 16 | (53) |
| Hispanic | 29 | (32) | 10 | (33) | 9 | (30) | 10 | (33) |
| Black-non Hispanic | 16 | (18) | 8 | (27) | 7 | (23) | 1 | (3) |
| Asian | 4 | (4) | 0 | (0) | 1 | (3) | 3 | (10) |
| Native American/Alaskan Native | 1 | (1) | 1 | (3) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) |
| Multiracial | 4 | (4) | 2 | (7) | 2 | (7) | 0 | (0) |
| Age | ||||||||
| 18–20 | 16 | (18) | 7 | (23) | 5 | (17) | 4 | (13) |
| 21–30 | 41 | (46) | 15 | (50) | 10 | (33) | 16 | (53) |
| 31–40 | 14 | (16) | 3 | (10) | 5 | (17) | 6 | (20) |
| 41–50 | 19 | (21) | 5 | (17) | 10 | (33) | 4 | (13) |
| Vaccinations | ||||||||
| Day 0 | 90 | (100) | 30 | (100) | 30 | (100) | 30 | (100) |
| Day 28 | 88 | (98) | 30 | (100) | 30 | (100) | 28 | (93) |
| Day 56 | 84 | (93) | 29 | (97) | 27 | (90) | 28 | (93) |
| Day 168 | 61 | (68) | 20 | (67) | 21 | (70) | 20 | (67) |
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Reactogenicity after rAd5 boost by study group.
| Study group | ||||||||
| Total | DNA+ rAd5 IM | DNA+ rAd5 ID | DNA+ rAd5 SC | |||||
| +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | |
| Headache | ||||||||
| None | 51/61 | (83.6) | 17/20 | (85.0) | 21/21 | (100.0) | 13/20 | (65.0) |
| Mild | 6/61 | (9.8) | 0/20 | (0.0) | 0/21 | (0.0) | 6/20 | (30.0) |
| Moderate | 4/61 | (6.6) | 3/20 | (15.0) | 0/21 | (0.0) | 1/20 | (5.0) |
| Pain | ||||||||
| None | 33/61 | (54.1) | 11/20 | (55.0) | 15/21 | (71.4) | 7/20 | (35.0) |
| Mild | 21/61 | (34.4) | 6/20 | (30.0) | 6/21 | (28.6) | 9/20 | (45.0) |
| Moderate | 6/61 | (9.8) | 2/20 | (10.0) | 0/21 | (0.0) | 4/20 | (20.0) |
| Severe | 1/61 | (1.6) | 1/20 | (5.0) | 0/21 | (0.0) | 0/20 | (0.0) |
| Erythema/induration | ||||||||
| None | 24/61 | (39.3) | 18/20 | (90.0) | 1/21 | (4.8) | 5/20 | (25.0) |
| >0 to 25 cm2 | 28/61 | (45.9) | 2/20 | (10.0) | 19/21 | (90.5) | 7/20 | (35.0) |
| >25 to 81 cm2 | 6/61 | (9.8) | 0/20 | (0.0) | 1/21 | (4.8) | 5/20 | (25.0) |
| >81 cm2 | 3/61 | (4.9) | 0/20 | (0.0) | 0/21 | (0.0) | 3/20 | (15.0) |
Figure 2Anti-Env Binding antibody response by administration route at 4 weeks post Ad5 boost.
Anti-Env binding antibody levels and % response are shown per route of administration. Positive responses are in red and non-responders in blue.
ELISpot response rates to any HIV peptide by study visit and study group.
| Study group | ||||||||
| Total | DNA+ rAd5 IM | DNA+ rAd5 ID | DNA+ rAd5 SC | |||||
| +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | |
| Baseline | 2/58 | (3.4) | 1/19 | (5.3) | 0/18 | (0.0) | 1/20 | (5.0) |
| 2 weeks post DNA series | 24/57 | (42.1) | 8/18 | (44.4) | 10/20 | (50.0) | 6/19 | (31.6) |
| 4 weeks post rAd5 boost | 21/51 | (41.2) | 7/15 | (46.7) | 6/17 | (35.3) | 8/18 | (44.4) |
Figure 3Interferon-γ ELISpot response to Env, Gag, Nef, Pol global PTE peptide stimulation by administration route.
(A) At 2 weeks post last DNA prime and (B) 4 weeks post Ad5 boost. The scale indicates spot-forming cells per million peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
ICS responses to any HIV antigen by study visit and study group.
| Study group | ||||||||
| Total | DNA+ rAd5 IM | DNA+ rAd5 ID | DNA+ rAd5 SC | |||||
| +/n | % | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | +/n | (%) | |
| CD4+ T cell responses | ||||||||
| 2 weeks post DNA series | 22/54 | (40.7) | 6/17 | (35.3) | 8/19 | (42.1) | 8/19 | (42.1) |
| 4 weeks post Ad5 boost | 14/49 | (28.6) | 5/17 | (29.4) | 3/15 | (20.0) | 6/17 | (35.3) |
| CD8+ T cell responses | ||||||||
| 2 weeks post DNA series | 11/57 | (16.9) | 4/19 | (21.1) | 2/20 | (10.0) | 5/19 | (26.3) |
| 4 weeks post Ad5 boost | 15/53 | (32.0) | 5/17 | (29.4) | 3/18 | (16.7) | 9/18 | (50.0) |
Figure 4Percentage of CD4+ T cells producing interferon γ and/or Interleukine 2 by administration route.
(A) in response to any Env peptides (B) in response to any Gag peptides before (2 weeks post last DNA prime) and after the Ad5 boost (4 weeks post Ad5 boost).
Figure 5Percentage of CD8+ T cells producing interferon γ and/or Interleukine 2 by administration route.
(A) in response to any Env peptides (B) in response to any Pol peptides before (2 weeks post last DNA prime) and after the Ad5 boost (4 weeks post Ad5 boost).