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About
Antibodies are natural proteins that the body makes to fight infections. Antibodies can also be manufactured like a drug and infused or injected into the body to prevent or treat a disease. The purpose of this study is to test the safety of and the body's response to an antibody against HIV in healthy, HIV-uninfected adults.
Full description
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and drug levels of five different schedules for the intravenous (IV) and subcutaneous (SC) administration of a human monoclonal antibody (VRC-HIVMAB060-00-AB [VRC01]) against HIV in healthy, HIV-uninfected adults.
The study will enroll 88 healthy, HIV-uninfected adults aged 18 to 50 years.
This study will enroll participants in 5 groups. Groups 1-3 will enroll simultaneously. Groups 1 and 2 will be randomized together but not blinded, while Group 3 will be randomized separately and will be blinded. With the implementation of Version 2.0, Groups 4 and 5 will be randomized together and will enroll simultaneously. Each group will have a different schedule of clinic visits and receive different doses of VRC01 or placebo for VRC01. Participants will attend 8 months of scheduled clinic visits.
Participants in Group 1 will receive an IV infusion of VRC01 on Days 0, 28, 56, 84, 112, and 140. Participants in Group 2 will receive an IV infusion of VRC01 on Days 0, 56, and 112. Participants in Group 3 will receive an IV infusion of VRC01 or IV placebo for VRC01 on Day 0, followed by SC injections of VRC01 or SC placebo for VRC01 on Days 14, 28, 42, 56, 70, 84, 98, 112, 126, 140, and 154. Participants in Groups 4 and 5 will receive an IV infusion of VRC01 (each group will receive a different dose) on Days 0, 56, and 112.
Participants will remain in the clinic for about an hour after receiving the infusions and injections for observation and monitoring. Participants in Group 3 who have no problems with the first SC injection will have to wait in the clinic for only a half an hour after the rest of the SC injections.
At study entry, participants will give a medical history; undergo a physical exam, blood collection, and urine collection; and receive HIV risk reduction counseling. At follow-up visits, participants will undergo a brief physical exam and blood collection, receive HIV risk reduction counseling, and be asked questions about their health and their experience participating in the study. At all visits, participants who were born female will have a pregnancy test. At select study visits, saliva, rectal, and semen or cervical secretion samples will be collected from participants who consent to collection of these samples.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
General and Demographic Criteria
HIV-Related Criteria
Laboratory Inclusion Values
Hemogram/Complete Blood Count (CBC)
Chemistry
Virology
Urine
Normal urine:
Reproductive Status
Participants who were born female: negative serum or urine beta human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-HCG) pregnancy test performed prior to infusion on the day of initial infusion. Persons who are not of reproductive potential because of having undergone total hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy (verified by medical records) are not required to undergo pregnancy testing.
Reproductive status: A participant who was born female must:
Participants who were born female must also agree not to seek pregnancy through alternative methods, such as artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization until after the last required protocol clinic visit.
Exclusion criteria
General
Vaccines and Other Injections
Immune System
Clinically Significant Medical Conditions
Untreated or incompletely treated syphilis infection
Clinically significant medical condition, physical examination findings, clinically significant abnormal laboratory results, or past medical history with clinically significant implications for current health. A clinically significant condition or process includes but is not limited to:
Any medical, psychiatric, occupational, or other condition that, in the judgment of the investigator, would interfere with, or serve as a contraindication to, protocol adherence, assessment of safety or reactogenicity, or a participant's ability to give informed consent
Psychiatric condition that precludes compliance with the protocol. Specifically excluded are persons with psychoses within the past 3 years, ongoing risk for suicide, or history of suicide attempt or gesture within the past 3 years.
Current anti-tuberculosis (TB) prophylaxis or therapy
Asthma other than mild, well-controlled asthma (symptoms of asthma severity as defined in the most recent National Asthma Education and Prevention Program [NAEPP] Expert Panel report).
Exclude a participant who uses a short-acting rescue inhaler (typically a beta 2 agonist) daily, or uses moderate/high dose inhaled corticosteroids, or in the past year has either of the following:
Diabetes mellitus type 1 or type 2, including cases controlled with diet alone. (Not excluded: history of isolated gestational diabetes)
Hypertension:
Bleeding disorder diagnosed by a doctor (e.g., factor deficiency, coagulopathy, or platelet disorder requiring special precautions)
Malignancy (Not excluded: participant who has had malignancy excised surgically and who, in the investigator's estimation, has a reasonable assurance of sustained cure, or who is unlikely to experience recurrence of malignancy during the period of the study)
Seizure disorder: history of seizure(s) within past 3 years. Also exclude if participant has used medications in order to prevent or treat seizure(s) at any time within the past 3 years.
Asplenia: any condition resulting in the absence of a functional spleen
History of hereditary angioedema, acquired angioedema, or idiopathic angioedema.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
88 participants in 6 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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