| Literature DB >> 25855300 |
Marina Caskey1, Florian Klein1, Julio C C Lorenzi1, Michael S Seaman2, Anthony P West3, Noreen Buckley1, Gisela Kremer4, Lilian Nogueira1, Malte Braunschweig5, Johannes F Scheid1, Joshua A Horwitz1, Irina Shimeliovich1, Sivan Ben-Avraham1, Maggi Witmer-Pack1, Martin Platten6, Clara Lehmann6, Leah A Burke7, Thomas Hawthorne8, Robert J Gorelick9, Bruce D Walker10, Tibor Keler8, Roy M Gulick11, Gerd Fätkenheuer6, Sarah J Schlesinger1, Michel C Nussenzweig12.
Abstract
HIV-1 immunotherapy with a combination of first generation monoclonal antibodies was largely ineffective in pre-clinical and clinical settings and was therefore abandoned. However, recently developed single-cell-based antibody cloning methods have uncovered a new generation of far more potent broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV-1 (refs 4, 5). These antibodies can prevent infection and suppress viraemia in humanized mice and nonhuman primates, but their potential for human HIV-1 immunotherapy has not been evaluated. Here we report the results of a first-in-man dose escalation phase 1 clinical trial of 3BNC117, a potent human CD4 binding site antibody, in uninfected and HIV-1-infected individuals. 3BNC117 infusion was well tolerated and demonstrated favourable pharmacokinetics. A single 30 mg kg(-1) infusion of 3BNC117 reduced the viral load in HIV-1-infected individuals by 0.8-2.5 log10 and viraemia remained significantly reduced for 28 days. Emergence of resistant viral strains was variable, with some individuals remaining sensitive to 3BNC117 for a period of 28 days. We conclude that, as a single agent, 3BNC117 is safe and effective in reducing HIV-1 viraemia, and that immunotherapy should be explored as a new modality for HIV-1 prevention, therapy and cure.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25855300 PMCID: PMC4890714 DOI: 10.1038/nature14411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962