Phase 1 safety and immunogenicity evaluation of ADVAX, a multigenic, DNA-based clade C/B' HIV-1 candidate vaccine

Sandhya Vasan, Sarah J Schlesinger, Yaoxing Huang, Arlene Hurley, Angela Lombardo, Zhiwei Chen, Soe Than, Phumla Adesanya, Catherine Bunce, Mark Boaz, Rosanne Boyle, Eddy Sayeed, Lorna Clark, Daniel Dugin, Claudia Schmidt, Yang Song, Laura Seamons, Len Dally, Martin Ho, Carol Smith, Martin Markowitz, Josephine Cox, Dilbinder K Gill, Jill Gilmour, Michael C Keefer, Patricia Fast, David D Ho, Sandhya Vasan, Sarah J Schlesinger, Yaoxing Huang, Arlene Hurley, Angela Lombardo, Zhiwei Chen, Soe Than, Phumla Adesanya, Catherine Bunce, Mark Boaz, Rosanne Boyle, Eddy Sayeed, Lorna Clark, Daniel Dugin, Claudia Schmidt, Yang Song, Laura Seamons, Len Dally, Martin Ho, Carol Smith, Martin Markowitz, Josephine Cox, Dilbinder K Gill, Jill Gilmour, Michael C Keefer, Patricia Fast, David D Ho

Abstract

Background: We conducted a Phase I dose escalation trial of ADVAX, a DNA-based candidate HIV-1 vaccine expressing Clade C/B' env, gag, pol, nef, and tat genes. Sequences were derived from a prevalent circulating recombinant form in Yunnan, China, an area of high HIV-1 incidence. The objective was to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of ADVAX in human volunteers.

Methodology/principal findings: ADVAX or placebo was administered intramuscularly at months 0, 1 and 3 to 45 healthy volunteers not at high risk for HIV-1. Three dosage levels [0.2 mg (low), 1.0 mg (mid), and 4.0 mg (high)] were tested. Twelve volunteers in each dosage group were assigned to receive ADVAX and three to receive placebo in a double-blind design. Subjects were followed for local and systemic reactogenicity, adverse events, and clinical laboratory parameters. Study follow up was 18 months. Humoral immunogenicity was evaluated by anti-gp120 binding ELISA. Cellular immunogenicity was assessed by a validated IFNgamma ELISpot assay and intracellular cytokine staining. ADVAX was safe and well-tolerated, with no vaccine-related serious adverse events. Local and systemic reactogenicity events were reported by 64% and 42% of vaccine recipients, respectively. The majority of events were mild. The IFNgamma ELISpot response rates to any HIV antigen were 0/9 (0%) in the placebo group, 3/12 (25%) in the low-dosage group, 4/12 (33%) in the mid-dosage group, and 2/12 (17%) in the high-dosage group. Overall, responses were generally transient and occurred to each gene product, although volunteers responded to single antigens only. Binding antibodies to gp120 were not detected in any volunteers, and HIV seroconversion did not occur.

Conclusions/significance: ADVAX delivered intramuscularly is safe, well-tolerated, and elicits modest but transient cellular immune responses.

Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00249106.

Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1. Clinical Trial Participant Flow Diagram.
Figure 1. Clinical Trial Participant Flow Diagram.
Figure 2. Local and Systemic Reactogenicity by…
Figure 2. Local and Systemic Reactogenicity by Dosage Group.
Panels A and B depict the percentage of volunteers experiencing local or systemic reactogenicity, respectively, by severity and dosage group. Total responses and (percentage of responses) are depicted above each bar. The proportion of volunteers experiencing moderate or severe local reactogenicity increased with increasing dosage (two-tailed Cochran-Armitage trend test, p = 0.0040). A similar comparison of systemic reactogenicity was not statistically significant (p = 0.738).

References

    1. UNAIDS. AIDS Epidemic Update: December 2007. UNAIDS/07.27E/JC1322E.
    1. Xiao Y, Kristensen S, Sun J, Lu L, Vermund SH. Expansion of HIV/AIDS in China: lessons from Yunnan Province. Soc Sci Med. 2007;64:665–675.
    1. Wei L, Chen J, Rodolph M, Beauchamp G, Masse B, et al. HIV incidence, retention, and changes of high-risk behaviors among rural injection drug users in Guangxi, China. Subst Abus. 2006;27:53–61.
    1. Zhang L, Chen Z, Cao Y, Yu J, Li G, et al. Molecular characterization of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and hepatitis C virus in paid blood donors and injection drug users in china. J Virol. 2004;78:13591–13599.
    1. Huang Y, Chen Z, Zhang W, Gurner D, Song Y, et al. Design, construction, and characterization of a dual-promoter multigenic DNA vaccine directed against an HIV-1 subtype C/B' recombinant. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2008;47:403–411.
    1. Chen Z, Huang Y, Zhao X, Ba L, Zhang W, et al. Design, construction, and characterization of a multigenic modified vaccinia Ankara candidate vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 subtype C/B'. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2008;47:412–421.
    1. McConkey SJ, Reece WHH, Moorthy VS, Webster D, Dunachie S, et al. Enhanced T-cell immunogenicity of plasmid DNA vaccines boosted by recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara in humans. Nat Med. 2003;9:729–735.
    1. Goonetilleke N, Moore S, Dally L, Winstone N, Cebere I, et al. Induction of multifunctional human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-specific T cells capable of proliferation in healthy subjects by using a prime-boost regimen of DNA- and modified vaccinia virus Ankara-vectored vaccines expressing HIV-1 gag coupled to CD8+ T-cell epitopes. J Virol. 2006;80:4717–4728.
    1. Harari A, Bart PA, Stohr W, Tapia G, Garcia M, et al. An HIV-1 clade C DNA prime, NYVAC boost vaccine regimen induces reliable, polyfunctional, and long-lasting T cell responses. J Exp Med. 2008;205:63–77.
    1. Amara RR, Villinger F, Altman JD, Lydy SL, O'Neil SP, et al. Control of a musosal challenge and prevention of AIDS by a multiprotein DNA/MVA vaccine. Science. 2001;292:69–74.
    1. Ellenberger D, Otten RA, Li B, Aidoo M, Rodriguez V, et al. HIV-1 DNA/MVA vaccination reduces the per exposure probability of infection during repeated mucosal SHIV challenges. Virology. 2006;352:216–225.
    1. Boaz MJ, Hayes P, Tarragona T, Seamons L, Cooper A, et al. Concordant Proficiency in Measurement of T-Cell Immunity in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Vaccine Clinical Trials by Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell and Enzyme-Linked Immunospot Assays in Laboratories from Three Continents. Clin Vaccine Immunol. 2009;16:147–155.
    1. Huang, Y, Chen A, Li X, Chen Z, Zhang W, et al. Enhancement of HIV DNA vaccine immunogenicity by the NKT cell ligand, a-galactosylceramide. Vaccine. 2008;26:1807–1816.
    1. Mulligan MJ, Russell ND, Celum C, Kahn J, Noonan E, et al. Excellent safety and tolerability of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 pGA2/JS2 plasmid DNA priming vector vaccine in HIV type 1 uninfected adults. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2006. 22:678–83.
    1. Catanzaro AT, Roederer M, Koup RA, Bailer RT, Enama ME, et al. Phase I clinical evaluation of a six-plasmid multiclade HIV-1 DNA candidate vaccine. Vaccine 2007. 25:4085–4092.
    1. Graham BS, Koup RA, Roederer M, Bailer RT, Enama ME, et al. Phase I Safety and Immunogenicity Evaluation of a Multiclade HIV-1 Candidate DNA Vaccine. J Infect Dis 2006. 194:1650–1660.
    1. Sadagopal S, Amara RR, Montefiori DC, Wyatt LS, Staprans SI, et al. Signature for long-term vaccine-mediated control of a Simian and human immunodeficiency virus 89.6P challenge: stable low-breadth and low-frequency T-cell response capable of coproducing gamma interferon and interleukin-2. J Virol. 2005;79:3243–3253.
    1. McElrath MJ, De Rosa SC, Moodie Z, Dubey S, Kierstead L, et al. HIV-1 vaccine-induced immunity in the test-of-concept Step Study: a case-cohort analysis. Lancet. 2008;372:1894–1905.
    1. Buchbinder SP, Mehotra DV, Duerr A, Fitzgerald DW, Mogg R, et al. Efficacy assessment of a cell-mediated immunity HIV-1 vaccine (the Step Study): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, test-of-concept trial. Lancet. 2008;372:1881–1893.
    1. Jones NG, DeCamp A, Gilbert P, Peterson ML, Gurwith M, et al. AIDSVAX immunization induces HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses in high-risk, HIV-negative volunteers who subsequently acquire HIV infection. Vaccine. 2009;27:1136–1140.
    1. McCormack S, Stöhr W, Barber T, Bart PA, Harari A, et al. EV02: a Phase I trial to compare the safety and immunogenicity of HIV DNA-C prime-NYVAC-C boost to NYVAC-C alone. Vaccine. 2008;26:3162–74.
    1. Mooij P, Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh SS, Beenhakker N, van Haaften P, Baak I, et al. Comparison of human and rhesus macaque T-cell responses elicited by boosting with NYVAC encoding human immunodeficiency virus type 1 clade C immunogens. J Virol. 2009;83:5881–9.
    1. Ramanathan VD, Kumar M, Mahalingam J, Sathyamoorthy P, Narayanan PR, et al. A Phase 1 Study to Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of a Recombinant HIV-1 Subtype C Modified Vaccinia Ankara Virus Vaccine Candidate in Indian volunteers. (in press, AIDS Res Human Retroviruses)
    1. Boyer JD, Robinson TM, Kutzler MA, Vansant G, Hokey DA, et al. Protection against simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) 89.6P in macaques after coimmunization with SHIV antigen and IL-15 plasmid. Proc Nat Acad Sci USA. 2007;104:18648–18653.
    1. Luxembourg A, Evans CF, Hannaman D. Electroporation-based DNA immunisation: translation to the clinic. Expert Opin Biol Ther. 2007;7:1647–1664.

Source: PubMed

3
S'abonner